Feds rarely punish hospitals for turning away pregnant patients
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[September 27, 2024]
By AMANDA SEITZ
As the pregnant woman's contractions rolled in every two minutes, staff
at Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, dispatched an ambulance to send her elsewhere.
Just two minutes later, she gave birth to a 6-pound baby girl in the cab
of the ambulance down the road from the 900-bed hospital.
The incident, government investigators concluded last year, was a
violation of a federal law that requires emergency rooms to stabilize
patients in medical distress before discharging or transferring them.
Yet, Our Lady of the Lake has never been penalized for that incident or
any of its other violations of the law. Few emergency rooms ever are.
Just a dozen hospitals have been fined for refusing to treat patients —
pregnant or not — over the past two years, an Associated Press analysis
of civil monetary penalties issued by the U.S. Health and Human Services
Office of Inspector General found. It took years for the government to
decide those penalties.
Not one of the more than 100 emergency rooms that mistreated or turned
away pregnant women since 2022, when the Biden administration pledged to
toughen enforcement of the law, has been fined.
“What little we know about the investigations have yielded very rare
results,” said Sara Rosenbaum, a George Washington University health law
and policy professor.
At Our Lady of the Lake, which did not provide comment for this article,
inspectors determined the emergency room’s staff members violated the
federal mandate seven times since 2017, when they refused a needed
surgery to a Medicaid patient with a broken spine, left a suicidal
teenager unattended in the lobby and failed to examine another pregnant
woman before sending her to another hospital, federal records show.
Other emergency rooms denied care to pregnant women, sometimes leaving
them to miscarry in bathrooms, deliver babies in cars or develop risky
infections. Some repeatedly flouted the mandate without consequence,
including one Tennessee emergency room with such long wait times that a
pregnant woman had to be hospitalized for a week after an 8-hour wait
and a man with chest pain collapsed in the lobby, then died.
HHS does not demand fines from hospitals that violate the law except in
unusual cases where they refuse to improve their practices, agency
officials said.
“Because the consequences are so real, we have seen hospitals work with
us almost every single time,” HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a
statement to the AP. “We have been and will continue to be forward
leaning here, communicating our intent directly and very seriously to
hospital executives and provider associations which is, in part, why we
have seen such good cooperation.”
After the Supreme Court overturned the nationwide right to an abortion,
the Biden administration turned to a longstanding federal law, the
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act, in a frantic effort to
ensure abortion access for women in dire medical circumstances. The
White House has argued that to comply with the law, hospitals must
provide emergency abortions for pregnant women who need them to save
their lives or reproductive organs, despite state abortion bans.
Asked about the AP’s findings on Friday, White House press secretary
Karine Jean-Pierre put blame on former President Donald Trump for
appointing three Supreme Court justices who ruled to upend U.S. abortion
rights.
The Biden administration has sent letters to hospitals repeatedly
reminding them of that law and the penalties — up to $129,232 per
violation or loss of Medicare funding — for flouting it.
It also has rolled out a new website making it easier for patients to
file a complaint if they are rejected, and it promised to expediate
those investigations.
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Mylissa Farmer stands for a portrait at her home in Joplin, Mo., on
Sept. 28, 2022. (Nathan Papes/The Springfield News-Leader via AP,
File)
Last year, for example, HHS
announced that two facilities — Freeman Health System in Joplin,
Missouri, and University of Kansas Health System in Kansas City,
Kansas — ran afoul of the federal law after refusing an emergency
abortion to Mylissa Farmer.
Doctors at both hospitals told the 41-year old Missouri woman that
her baby had no chance of surviving after her water broke at 17
weeks but because a fetal heartbeat was still detectable, her
condition needed to worsen before they’d be willing to terminate her
pregnancy.
Neither hospital has been fined.
“It would be welcomed if the federal government took a stronger
enforcement role in those cases.” said Alison Tanner, an attorney
for National Women’s Law Center who represents Farmer. “We have a
maternal health crisis in this country and in states with bans on
abortion care, it is far worse and more dangerous."
Tanner said the HHS Office of Inspector General, which is
responsible for issuing fines for violations of the law, is
investigating Farmer’s case. The office declined to comment on cases
under review.
The government’s most recent fines against hospitals that turned
away pregnant patients were cases from years ago.
A Tennessee hospital agreed to pay a $100,000 fine for a 2018 case
involving a pregnant patient who was discharged and gave birth in a
car at 42 weeks pregnant. A Kentucky hospital was fined $90,000 for
refusing to help a patient with an ectopic pregnancy in 2021.
After a complaint against a hospital is filed, a state surveyor
investigates the hospital. A physician and the federal government
review the findings to determine whether or not a patient received
inadequate treatment. If an emergency room violated the federal law,
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services may refer the case to
the HHS inspector general to consider penalties.
Those investigations are “slow, insufficiently staffed, with a lot
of pushback tolerated from hospitals,” Rosenbaum, an expert on the
law, said.
Emergency rooms were supposed to stop turning away patients in
medical crisis decades ago, when Congress passed bipartisan
legislation designed to prohibit patient dumping that
then-Republican President Ronald Reagan signed in 1986.
The law requires facilities that accept Medicare funding to provide
a medical screening exam to anyone who shows up at or near their
door and offer stabilizing treatment, if needed. Emergency rooms
without the resources or staff to properly treat that patient are
required to arrange a medical transfer to another hospital, after
they’ve confirmed the facility can accept the patient.
The law, Sen. David Durenberger promised nearly 40 years ago as he
rallied for its passage, would be a warning to private hospitals
that had been dumping pregnant patients and gunshot victims on the
doorsteps of public hospitals.
“This amendment is to send a clear signal to the hospital
community,” he said on the floor of Congress. “That all Americans,
regardless of wealth or status, should know that a hospital will
provide what services it can when they are truly in distress.”
But a decade ago, a report published by the U.S. Commission on Civil
Rights concluded there was “insufficient regulatory oversight of the
law,” and that hospitals were not properly training staff to follow
the mandate nor did they have proper funding to comply with it. ___
Associated Press editor Kevin S. Vineys contributed to this report.
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