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The hospital has lost $5 million a year since 2000. The state has cited the hospital for safety violations that would require nearly $6 million to correct. "The building is 85 years old, is no longer safe to operate as a hospital facility, and the cost of doing so is prohibitive," the Southern Illinois Healthcare Foundation, the hospital's operator, said in a report to the state. In 2008, with losses mounting, the hospital shut down 130 hospital beds and stopped providing trauma care, sending victims of shootings and car accidents six miles across the Mississippi River to hospitals in Missouri. Still, the number of uninsured patients for the foundation's two hospitals swelled by more than 300 percent during the recession. And the hospital had trouble getting timely reimbursement from Medicaid. Illinois, with severe budget problems, has been notoriously late in making Medicaid payments to hospitals and other providers, said East St. Louis Mayor Alvin Parks Jr. Near Chicago, Oak Forest Hospital is one of three hospitals owned and run by Cook County, part of the safety net that takes all patients whether they can pay or not. The hospital helps poor patients sign up for Medicaid, but it can take six months to get them on the program. The number of uninsured patients more than doubled during the recession, with the hospital carrying the costs. "Somebody has to take the responsibility," Dr. Srinivas Jolepalem, a staff member who was laid off last year during budget cuts. Emergency room visits increased from 29,000 in 2007 to nearly 33,000 in 2009. The proposed closures in Illinois have drawn crowds of chanting protesters to meetings. In that, it is similar to other recent hospital closures elsewhere. In Pennsylvania, the closure and demolition of Braddock Hospital last year in the eastern suburbs of Pittsburgh sparked dozens of protests and at least two lawsuits. "Very often there's a lot of panic," said Siegel of the National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems. If Oak Forest closes, 42-year-old Gilbert Shepard, who suffers from congestive heart failure and shortness of breath, fears he'll have to travel 20 miles to another county hospital in Chicago, where the emergency room is often crowded and waits are many hours long. "I will have to ride a bus or get someone to drop me off and wait for hours before I'll be seen," Shepard said.
[Associated
Press;
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