
Henipin County Commissioners are considering seizing HCMC, amid financial difficulties
The Council of Commissioners in the Henipin Province is considering taking over some of the Henipin Health Care Department-which includes HCMC in the center of Minynabolis-where the health care system faces financial problems.
According to boycotting officials and hospitals, the Safety-Net Hospital system has seen a net operating loss for seven years of past eight years.
The Board of Directors is currently overseeing HCMC, consisting of hospital staff and community leaders who work on the basis of volunteering. However, the provinces of the provinces have a proposal on the table to dissolve the council, and to take over the duties of supervision.
Some hospital board members say this is the wrong solution.
President Mohamed Omar said that the financial issues of the hospital stem from its role as a safety network, while caring for unlikely or insured patients. This means that he is struggling to bring money from insurance companies.
He said that the dissolution of the council will not resolve this issue.
“We have a financial problem,” Omar said. “We have no problem with governance.”
At a press conference on Monday, Omar and other members of the board of directors presented the role of the Council in representing the hospital and society patients. Omar said that the board of directors is now 60 percent of the colored people, reflecting the diverse population of the hospital.
“We are supervising, we are society,” said Thomas Adams Vice President Thomas Adams. “The removal of this council effectively removes the voices that represent the majority of patients served by HCMC.”
The hospital administration without a plate will not be unprecedented. Until 2007, HCMC worked as a section inside Hinibin Province, to submit reports to the provincial commissioners. The state lawmakers and provincial officials changed the Temple in 2007, as they established a health care system in Hennepin as a sub -public company and a hospital management board.
The proposed decision says that dissolving the Board of Directors will give commissioners a more direct look at the hospital’s financing.
“This proposed procedure is the next step to deepen the participation of the provincial council in critical decisions in its sub -health system, given its current crisis and the potential impact on both the hospital and the province as a whole,” says the decision.
Henipin Provincial Commissioner is scheduled to review the decision at a meeting on Tuesday afternoon. The members of the Board of Directors said that they will be at the meeting to push the commissioners to leave the board of directors.
Commissioners will need a third of the decision to agree to the decision. They are expected to vote on this measure and the hospital budget of $ 1.6 billion, on August 12.
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