Sunday, December 2, 2007

Grady

I shouldn't be blogging today. The semester is almost over and I've got more work to do than I can fathom.

But today, while working on my Op-Ed piece for our Health and Medical Journalism class, I began reading a string of articles at the AJC about Grady Hospital in Atlanta.

I first heard about Grady when my friend Elga was working as a Nurse in the Emergency Room. The stories she told were not for the faint of heart.

Located in Atlanta, with the best of only four trauma units in the state, 50% of Grady patients are covered by Medicaid. Apparently it is quite a zoo there, both patient-wise and administration-wise. My friend Elga lived in dread of full moon shifts in the E.R.

I've been reading about Grady's gradual slide into debt and disrepair for many years now. The more I read, the more confused I get about what the problems are and what the solution is.

The one thing I do know is that the people of Georgia want and need Grady hospital to survive. Grady is a medical home for many Atlantans in the same way that Charity hospital in New Orleans was for those Citizens.

More importantly, I discovered from the AJC articles, Grady is the States largest teaching hospital.

"Without it, the Morehouse School of Medicine, tasked with the mission of training doctors to work in underserved areas of the state, would not exist."--According to Mike King of the AJC

Our states largest teaching hospital is teetering on the verge of collapse. Why?

5 comments:

Kimberly Davis said...

These are good questions. Could it have something to do with health and wealth? Could it have something to do with the same inattention that befelled Charity Hospital in New Orleans?

Amber Roessner said...

I've heard bits and pieces of the Grady hospital story but from your blog it does sound eerily similar to Charity Hospital. It's like I told someone the other day: after our return from New Orleans, I drove around parts of Athens and Winder and realized that if Katrina had happened in our state, the same problems would have taken place. Will it take another Katrina for our nation to start addressing these sort of disparities?

Tabitha said...

I like your comparison of Grady to abandoned Charity in New Orleans. It put my New Orleans experience even more in my lap than it was before. How would I feel if that had happened to my Atlanta?

Dallas Health said...

What are the various types of health insurance programmes that are available to me, and which is best suited to suit the needs of my family and myself? How do I choose the ideal health care plan? What are the major points that one needs to bear in mind while buying Health Care Insurance Policy? http://natural-health-care-information.blogspot.com

john said...

Hi Christy Fricks,
Your post is nice & good.