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ATLANTA - September 12, 2022 - (Newswire.com)
The following is an open letter from the Atlanta Medical Association, Inc.
"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of convenience and comfort, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy." Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1963)
We, the Atlanta Medical Association, Inc. (ATLMed), ask the Greater Atlanta Community to stand with us as we strategize solutions to help decrease the impact of the planned closure of Atlanta Medical Center (AMC), which includes the combined campuses of Atlanta Medical Center South (recently renamed Wellstar East Point Health Center), by Wellstar Health System (Wellstar). This closure will affect affiliated doctors' offices, outpatient clinics, imaging and emergency services opened and built to serve our communities for the last 121 years. The public announcement made on Aug. 31, 2022, by Wellstar leadership has created, in our opinion, a second healthcare crisis and directly erodes the public safety of all that inhabit and visit Metropolitan Atlanta.
The closure of AMC is of great concern to our membership and community due to the significant effects of losing needed bed capacity, the loss of agency for our colleagues to practice medicine and the many unintended consequences that are likely to arise with the loss of healthcare access points and a Level 1 Trauma Center serving Georgia's most densely populated metropolitan area in the Southeast Region. AMC is also the second largest licensed bed hospital in Georgia with teaching programs and an Advanced Primary StrokeCenter - none of which are easy to replace.
Referencing the 2022 Community Health Needs Assessment (CHNA), published by Wellstar earlier this year, it is undebatable that Wellstar leadership understands and is acutely aware of the direct and indirect effects of closing these critical two hospitals within the shared service area. As clearly stated, in the CHNA, "the primary focus of data collection for this assessment was on under-resourced, high-need and medically underserved population living in the primary service area of the hospital." Furthermore, the report also recognizes "the COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact on all health needs - disproportionately affecting historically disadvantaged groups." In addition, there were 14 areas identified (1) Obesity, (2) Access to appropriate care, (3) Behavioral healthcare, (4) Educational awareness, (5) Equitable revitalization, Employment and job training, (6) Maternal and child health, (7) Healthy living, (8) Housing, (9) Poverty, (10) Education, (11) Cancer, (12) Culturally competent services, (13) Sexually transmitted diseases and (14) Violence and crime. It is also notable that secondary data presented within this report demonstrated that the social determinants of health "were improving in many areas served by AMC before the global pandemic."
Over the last two years, ATLMedmembers and many others answered the call to action, continuing to serve on the frontlines while taking reductions in pay and without appropriate personal protective equipment -- as we learned to navigate an unprecedented and devastating global pandemic. Despite the profound loss of life, personal and societal consequences from which we are all still reeling, we did not retreat. Instead, we partnered and collaborated with our patients and the community to adapt our practices to allow us to leverage innovative solutions to care for our patients.
We are demanding that Wellstar do the same. We demand, on behalf of our current and future patients, that Wellstar allow another capable entity the opportunity to purchase and operate these facilities to serve our community and their healthcare needs. Creating barriers to this end signals to all that Wellstar has decided to leave the most vulnerable in our community uncared for and without a clear plan to transition care. We remind the Atlanta community that Wellstar has significantly reduced our AMC physicians' capacity to serve the patients that they have proudly served for decades.
As the world, and certainly the Metropolitan Atlanta, are continuing to feel the impact of the novel COVID-19 virus, this abrupt and poorly planned announcement has foreshadowed a worsening public healthcare crisis. The closure of AMC's facilities will lead to a widening gap in healthcare disparities, increased loss of life, economic loss and emotional stress that are disproportionately affecting communities of color and patients living at levels of lower socioeconomic status. In addition, all of our neighbors, and visitors to Atlanta, are at significant risks for loss of life and/or significant disability due to the inevitable and unpredictable traumatic events that require the lifesaving Level 1 trauma care that we all have come to depend on in collaboration with our other community and academic hospitals.
While we do not have all the answers, the Atlanta Medical Association, Inc. and community partners are committed to making sure that we are at the table to collaborate and create an innovative solution for all. As much as any group with vested interest in the health outcomes of our citizens, we recognize what's at stake. With this letter, we extend our resources and expertise to collaborate with the Governor of Georgia, and other elected leaders, corporate partners, community organizations and the State of Georgia to figure out what's next for the greater community where we live, practice and serve.
Kevin E. Woods, M.D., M.P.H., 76th President, AtlantaMedical Association, Inc. www.atlmed.org
Media Relations Contact: Kimberly King - news@atlmed.org - 404-550-0954
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Related Files
0912022 Final News Release ATLMed on AMC Closure.pdf
Press Release Service by Newswire.com
Original Source: An Open Letter From AMA President Dr. Kevin Woods, MD, to the Greater Atlanta Community: Response to Wellstar Health System Announcement to Close AMC & AMC South