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The
Plan to Enlarge PCMH
Pitt
County Memorial Hospital had admitted about 56,000 patients by the time
its tenth anniversary came in 1961. An article in The Daily Reflector
commented on the growth in hospital personnel to 185, adding, and
one day, in the projected future, the staff will be something like 300
persons.
In a
special referendum that had been held in September 1958, a hospital bond
issue of $750,000 was passed to cover enlarging and improving PCMH. Federal
funds of $923,400 brought the total cost of the project to about $1.6
million.
Excavation
began in July 1959 on the first addition, a one-story wing at the west
end of the existing four-story hospital. It would provide an addition
to the emergency area, in which a new 100 KVA transformer bank would be
installed; this would supplement the existing bank to supply emergency
power to the entire building. The new one-story wing would also house
a new emergency room with two treatment rooms, each with two treatment
tables. Three observation beds were to be added, and three X-ray rooms.
There were also a new staff lounge, an outpatient waiting room, and an
observation room with four beds.
The
X-ray department would expand into the second added wing, with an office
and viewing room, a film storage room, two diagnostic rooms, and a deep
therapy room. The space that had been occupied by the staff lounge was
to be used for laboratory expansion. The basement of the two-story wing
would house a new kitchen, food storage compartments, a cafeteria, two
dining rooms, and ice machines, as well as a physical therapy room and
an exercise room. The old kitchen space on the second floor of the existing
building would be converted to a third major operating room, a sterilizing
room, and an operating room for dental surgery.
A four-story,
80-bed wing was to be built behind the existing building. The second phase
of construction was still under way in February 1961, to bring the number
of beds to 200. Laboratory space would be doubled, the entire hospital
would be air-conditioned, the heating system converted from coal to fuel
oil and natural gas, and an additional elevator installed.
What was known
as the Negro division of the hospital was to be expanded on
the first floor of the addition, the size of the coffee shop doubled in
size, and a chapel added. The Greenville Service League had pledged to
equip the small chapel, in cooperation with the Greenville Ministerial
Association, and pay for enlarging the coffee shop. The whole second floor
would be used for surgical patients, with a six-bed recovery room. Where
the new wing joined the existing hospital, a doctors dressing room
and lounge would be added.
Twenty-six
beds for obstetrical patients were to be added on the third floor, and
the pediatrics section moved to the fourth floor, with 25 beds. There
would be 45 beds for general medical patients on the third and fourth
floors of the existing hospital.
Other additions
were a physical therapy department, a new call system with an intercom
at the head of each bed connected to the nurses station, and enlarged
parking facilities.
By the early
1960s Pitt Memorial was one of the best equipped hospitals in the state,
and one of the largest east of Raleigh, but it was no longer adequate
for the countys needs. Where the national average was 42 beds per
1,000, Pitt County had only 105 for a population of 69,000, or less than
two beds per 1,000. The hospital should have had more than 300 beds.
In September
1961, another step was taken toward expanding the hospital, when the county
commissioners considered the hospital trustees request to purchase
an additional 15 acres of land on the south and west sides of the tract
that the Moye family had donated. After two months of deliberation by
its planning committee, the board approved the purchase of 12 acres. They
felt assured the land would be adequate for reasonable expansion
of the county medical facility within the foreseeable future, the
Daily Reflector reported.
The need was
clear to the physicians practicing at the hospital and to its trustees,
but the public was not prepared to act. Pitt County voters on June 8,
1963, defeated by a vote of 1,748 to 778 the proposal to increase the
countys special tax for support of the hospital from $0.54 per $100
of property evaluation to $1.04 per $100. The request for an increase
in the level of support had been initiated by the board of trustees because
of a $30,000 deficit in the hospitals balance sheet resulting from
unpaid patient accounts. The board, noting that April had shown a loss
but that during May the hospital had no loss, decided to hire an outside
bill collector to supplement the work of the hospital credit managers
office.
The Service
League of Greenville continued with unflagging support. It donated $4,500
toward the cost of the new critical care unit that the hospital was preparing
to open in the fall. The unit would have four beds and a specially trained
nurse always on duty in the room.
Desegregation
Since
the opening of the hospital, there had been two separate patient entrances,
with the white entrance located in front of the building where
it was convenient to drive up and walk in, and the colored
entrance around in the back of the building, at the top of a short flight
of steps.
All facilities
at Pitt County Memorial Hospital were desegregated on Monday, May 24,
1965, to avoid losing federal funds, which amounted to about $250,000
a year. No discrimination because of race, color, or national origin would
be practiced in the hospital toward patients or employees. No dining room
facility would be designated by race. All references to race were eliminated
from existing or future hospital records. The entrances and associated
waiting rooms were consolidated, and the colored waiting room
converted to an office.
There were
130 African-Americans employed by the hospital at the time, or 42 percent
of the total number of personnel.
Medicare
Arrives
The
advent of Medicare in 1966 transformed the financing of medical treatment.
Medicare largely funded the growth of the hospital over the next 17 years,
until Diagnosis Related Groups, or DRGs, cut the level of reimbursement.
When it started, Administrator C. D. Ward anticipated that there might
be some misunderstandings in the community about the Medicare requirement
that patients pay the initial $40 of their bill when they were admitted
to the hospital and about the other deductibles and copayments they would
have to pay later on. However, no problems occurred at PCMH when the Medicare
program of benefits for healthcare to the elderly was instituted on July
1, 1966.
Jack Richardson,
who joined the hospital administration just before Medicare took effect,
commented in an interview on May 22, 2000, that the doctors practicing
at PCMH took the lead in accepting Medicare assignments in eastern North
Carolina, in contrast with many other physicians in the area. The willingness
of the hospital medical staff to accept Medicare patients was widely known.
It resulted in an increase in the number of patients who came from other
areas to Greenville for medical care, greatly benefiting the hospitals
long-term growth.
Splitting
the Seams Again
This
growth created a need for hospital leaders to plot a course for future
expansion. On February 1, 1967, the board of trustees commissioned a survey
of the hospitals service area to identify the immediate and long-term
demands for expansion.
As a part
of this survey, the hospital trustees and medical staff, as well as professional
and business leaders in Greenville and Pitt County, met in August to discuss
the hospitals intensifying space problems. The average occupancy
ran above 80 percent, and up to 95 percent in the medical and surgical
floors; at times, occupancy ran so high that patient beds had to be placed
in the corridors.
The hospital
was not only starved for space, but also for money. Its financial operations
were hand-to-mouth, and it depended on immediate income for working expenses.
At the time, Blue Cross was the intermediary for Medicare, processing
claims for the government. This amounted to 35 or 36 percent of the hospitals
income. Since it took two weeks or more to process Medicare claims, accounts
often became payable before the money had been received to cover them.
The situation was particularly uncertain where the payroll was concerned,
since Ward had to wait for the Medicare checks from Blue Cross before
he could make out checks for the employees, and often had to hold checks
made out to vendors until enough cash was accumulated to pay them. There
was never much of a balance in the bank account.
T.B. Buck
Sitterson, who was Wards assistant at the time, on one occasion
reported that the time came around to pay the employees, who were paid
every two weeks. The bank account was virtually empty. Sitterson called
a Blue Cross representative whom he knew well and asked whether he could
bring some claims to the Blue Cross office in Durham and have them processed
right away. This was possible, so he took a briefcase full of claims to
Durham, and the claims office took some people from other work and assigned
them to processing Pitt Memorials reimbursements. They processed
the claim forms, and wrote a check for about $20,000. Sitterson put the
check in his pocket and carried it back to Greenville. It was just a little
more than enough to cover the payroll. The employees never knew how close
they came to not being paid.
Before making
any decision on expanding the hospital, the board of trustees waited for
the findings of a feasibility study by Charles P. Cardwell from the School
of Hospital Administration at the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond
and A. Gibson Howell, also from MCV. They set a deadline of April 1968
for delivery of the completed survey.
The survey
recommended immediate expansion from 205 to 305 beds by adding 100 private
rooms mostly for adult medical and surgical patients. Along with the enlarged
support services, this would necessitate a new building. Enough acreage
had been added to the 17 original acres so that there was ample room for
new construction. The consultants recommended that the hospital retain
flexibility in further expansion, and consider the development of the
East Carolina University School of Medicine and paramedical programs taught
in the hospital and at Pitt Community College.
In May 1968,
the board engaged the architectural firm of Freeman-White Associates of
Charlotte to design an architectural plan for expansion. In November,
the Joint Committee met to consider purchasing land around the hospital.
On August,
19, 1968, in a letter to Dr. Eric L. Fearrington, a member of the hospital
staff with whom he had been associated in his practice, Dr. Monroe summarized
the recommendations he had made to the hospital architect. He emphasized
the importance of providing for future expansion and planning for a comprehensive
health complex to which the hospital would be central.
Cardwell met
on January 13 with the joint conference committee of the Pitt County Board
of Commissioners, the hospital administration, and the hospital medical
staff. He had requested the meeting to discuss outpatient clinics and
possible involvement in educational programs. After a long discussion,
the group agreed that, while the primary responsibility of the hospital
was to provide good medical care to the area, they were willing
and even eager to negotiate with any established educational institution
in working out an affiliation to use the hospital for clinical experience
of their students. The group insisted that such an affiliation must
not pose any financial burden on patients or taxpayers, and should build
on the programs already being conducted within the hospital.
The board
instructed the consultants and the architects to include educational facilities
in their plans: conference rooms, lecture rooms, and a large auditorium.
The medical staff accepted the provision of outpatient services as an
irreversible trend, even though they did not fully agree that such services
were appropriate for a hospital. They agreed to keep communication open
between the hospital and East Carolina University and to discuss any proposed
programs that might be mutually beneficial.
In February
1969, Freeman-White proposed four alternative designs for expansion. Scheme
A proposed renovating and expanding each department of the
hospital where it was, with as little new construction as possible. There
were many disadvantages to this alternative, including interruptions of
service by the construction, which would take considerable time. Also,
this approach, which would cost about $7 million, would make further expansion
almost impossible.
Scheme B
included relocating many departments to a new addition, with minimum renovation
to the existing structure. Divisions that needed little refurbishing could
then reoccupy the space that had been used by the relocated functions.
Long corridors connected by ramps with varying slopes would connect the
new addition to the older construction. The consultants estimated the
cost of this plan at $7.3 million.
Ironically,
Scheme C was not proposed, but included only for comparison.
It examined the possibility that had been put aside as probably too expensive
to manage: building an entirely new building with 300 private rooms, and
making the old building into a long-term care facility, or converting
it into a county office building. The cost would be about $10.7 million.
Scheme D
was for a new 300-bed hospital with 65-75 percent private rooms, and the
rest semi-private, at a cost of $9.09 million.
Consultant
Cardwell supported Scheme B, because it required minimal renovation
to the existing structure, with administrative areas of the building being
most affected. Hospital clinical operations would be relatively undisturbed,
since the administrative functions could be moved to temporary mobile
buildings.
In March 1969,
several trustees, hospital administrators, and architects went to Raleigh
to meet with Bill Henderson, the executive director of the state Medical
Care Commission. This was the agency that approved all bonded indebtedness
for public health entities, and at a previous meeting it had been asked
to consider the four proposed alternatives for expanding the hospital.
Not more than a half-hour into the encounter, Henderson shocked the group
by informing them that the commission was not going to approve any expansion
for the hospital. He said that the building, even if expanded, would still
be substandard, and would not permit the hospital to achieve what he thought
its potential to be. Also, there was insufficient space around the building
to handle the greater parking demands that would result from an increase
in the number of patients. The commission was saying that in order to
do what they wanted to do, they should consider building a new building
in another location instead of expanding and renovating the old one. Without
the approval of the commission, there would be no state funds for expansion.
Local citizens would have to carry the entire burden.
Sitterson, who was
in the group that met with the Medical Care Commission, said, I
can remember the sick feeling that everyone had. We had a good building.
It was a brick building that was very adequate but needed expanding. It
was the equivalent of coming to the taxpayers of Pitt County today and
telling them that we had outgrown the hospital and wanted to build a new
one. I remember riding back to Greenville that day, and nobody said anything,
because nobody wanted to come home and be the one to tell the news.
In April,
Henderson wrote to the hospital planning group, For all of these
reasons and the little difference in money it would take to build an all-new
facility, we suggested that the local authorities might wish to place
prime priority on additional land and on studying seriously the advantages
that may accrue in approaching your problems with an all-new facility.
We are sure that you do not want to spend vast sums of money and still
wind up in a facility that is comparatively sub-standard.
The vast
sums of money that the city and county would have to raise locally
appeared at the time to be an insuperable obstacle to taking this route,
however desirable. The best course, in spite of the lack of encouragement
from the Medical Care Commission, seemed to be to renovate and expand
the existing hospital. In April, the committee met with the hospital board
and the county commissioners to review the commissions recommendations.
One option considered was selling the hospital. The sale would remove
the burden of having a bond issue, which would demand intensive campaigning
with no assurance of success, and if it failed would waste the time and
money invested in planning.
C.D. Ward
telephoned Cardwell to discuss the proposed addition to the hospital.
On May 1, 1969, Cardwell responded with a written recommendation to add
50 beds to the 100 recommended the year before, to bring the total to
350. He added that the installation of 40 modular structures similar to
some used by Rex Hospital in Raleigh might immediately relieve the overcrowding
problem. Although this approach would not save very much money, it would
save some time. Cardwell did not recommend whether the additional beds
should be added to the existing hospital, or whether a new hospital should
be built. He said that these possibilities had been explored earlier,
and any final decision would have to be made by the hospitals board
of trustees and presumably the county commissioners. Cardwell had also
learned that the Medical Care Commission had projected only 63 additional
beds for the eastern region of the state. This was a major obstacle in
the way of expansion. Since the Commission would not fund any beds beyond
its estimate of needs, the community would have to finance the project.
Sell
the old Hospital Building?
In
May, the joint committee of the commissioners and trustees met with the
East Carolina University Regional Development Institute to discuss seeking
buyers for the hospital building. R. T. Captain Tim Brinn,
an economic development consultant with the institute, got in touch with
several companies and government agencies that might be interested in
buying or leasing the building for their own use. They might convert it
to a hospital or long-term care facility, adding hospital bedrooms in
modular units, or building a second hospital to supplement the existing
one. Brinn found that several organizations were interested, but the time
schedule for replacing the hospital was an impediment. Both private groups
and government agencies hesitated to commit when the building would be
available for use no sooner than late 1974.
In October,
a number of companies with extended care facilities in North Carolina
had written about purchasing the hospital for use either for extended
care patients or as an operating hospital. On two occasions, the county
commissioners, the executive committee of the hospital trustees, and representatives
of the medical staff and administration met with representatives of one
of these companies, American Institutional Developers from Pennsylvania.
They discussed a medical complex that would eventually have a 200-250
bed acute care hospital, a subacute and rehabilitation hospital with 300
beds, and an intermediate care facility if economically feasible, with
centralized laboratory services and X-ray, some inpatient care, with outpatient
and ambulatory patient care. Day care services would be provided for employees
of the medical complex and other families in the community. The company
estimated the complex would cost altogether more than $10 million.
This statement
was pivotal in the companys proposal: The support of the state
and county would be limited to the care of the medically indigent, state
vocational rehabilitation patients and the like for whom arrangements
would have to be made by mutual agreement. Ultimate management authority
would be retained by the company, but with participation of local physicians
in setting policies. The company did not recommend selling the hospital
at that time to a private group but wanted to be considered a potential
purchaser if it was eventually sold. In the meantime, the company suggested
that they enter into a management contract to achieve more efficient operation.
The company
representatives met with the medical staff in November to discuss buying
the hospital. After that meeting, the physicians decided to mail a ballot
to members of the medical staff, asking whether they wished to continue
looking into private purchase. The staff voted to go on with negotiations.
In a tempestuous
meeting early in December 1969, Cardwell, the planning consultant, detailed
the many disadvantages of turning the hospital over to a private company.
The company would have to operate it at a profit, whatever effect this
might have on serving the community. He noted that private operation of
Pitt Memorial would almost certainly eliminate the possibility of affiliating
with a medical school if one should be established. His severe criticisms
appear to have had little effect on the commissioners negotiations.
On December
17, the county attorney was notified of the medical staffs November
vote. Interested businesses were scheduled to make presentations to joint
meetings of the county commissioners, the executive committee of the board
of trustees, the executive committee of the medical staff, and hospital
administrators.
Meanwhile, the persistent problems with overcrowding continued unabated.
On January 20, the hospital board voted to ask the county commissioners
as soon as possible to close discussions on the hospital sale. C.D. Ward
reported to the board that 11 patients had been in bed in the halls the
night before, and that hardly a day passed without patients in this situation.
He said also that the only bar to having a medical technology training
program at the hospital was the lack of lab space.
In January
and February, private firms continued to appear before members of the
joint committee. The committee decided to take no further proposals after
February 15, 1970. On March 31, the county commissioners met with hospital
trustees and medical staff to present the Regional Development Institutes
package of six proposals that had been submitted by private firms, along
with the other proposals being considered. Staff member Dr. William Fore
informed the commissioners that there were fewer than four beds per doctor
among the hospitals 200 beds. Dr. Donald Tucker, a member of the
executive committee of the hospital board, then spoke on the immediate
need for beds, as well as room for expansion of ancillary services such
as operating rooms, laboratory, X-ray, and other departments.
Dr. Howard
Gradis, chief of the hospitals medical staff, added, We have
to make our recommendations based on needsregardless of what it
costs. We should not try to second guess the public. Dr. Tucker
said that the public should understand that the county might lose control
of the hospital if money was not approved for expansion. One reason
we are faced with this problem today is because the commissioners and
people of the county were far-sighted 20 years ago and constructed what
was at that time the best medical facility in this part of the state.
The facility attracted the medical staff, which in turn attracted the
patients. Both Fore and Dr. Tucker declared that the shortage of facilities
had to be rectified in order to maintain the medical community and bring
in new doctors.
After receiving
the recommendations of trustees and the medical staff, the Board of Commissioners
decided to submit the question of sale to a private firm to the countys
citizens through a referendum on a bond issue. If the community supported
issuing bonds to finance expansion of the hospital, then there would be
no question of selling it.
Teaching
in the Hospital
East
Carolina University administrators had regularly pursued with hospital
representatives the possibility of using PCMHs facilities for clinical
instruction. Dr. Monroe, one of the Greenville physicians who had been
active at least from the early 1960s in the discussions, continued to
be involved after he became dean of the School of Allied Health and Social
Professions at ECU in June, 1968. He immediately began talking with the
PCMH administration and staff about making the proposed hospital a clinical
training site for allied health professionals studying at the university.
In April,
1970, Monroe proposed that ECU should farm out students, when the medical
school was opened, to community hospitals, instead of requesting state
funds to build an independent teaching hospital in Greenville. He made
the same proposal to a subcommittee of the Legislative Research Commissions
subcommittee on health, estimating that taking this route would save about
$18 million in construction costs and 3 million per year in operating
costs.
Funding
the Expansion
Then
on May 19 the hospital trustees voted unanimously to ask the county commissioners
to submit a $9 million bond proposal to fund expansion of the Fifth Street
hospital. The alternative chosen (close to Freeman-Whites Scheme
B) called for adding two floors with 42 beds above the hospitals
emergency area. A new building would be constructed in front of the hospital
to house 125 beds, 25 of them for intensive care. The foundation for the
new construction would be made strong enough to accommodate future expansion
of 10 or even 12 stories if needed. The medical base would be large enough
to provide X-ray, laboratory, and surgical facilities for a 500-bed hospital.
The trustees emphasized that they wished not only to get patients out
of the hallways, but to provide a hospital that would not be obsolete
within a few years. They wished also to continue using the present structure,
possibly converting it to an extended care facility later.
The trustees
met in the hospital board room with the county commissioners three days
later and presented the request for a bond referendum. The commissioners
did not act immediately on the hospital boards request, but promised
to meet again soon to vote on the issue. They acknowledged a pressing
need to improve the hospital facilities, but recognized the difficulty
of getting approval for any additional spending. Dr. Don Tucker, who was
present at the meeting, told the commissioners that it was not a threat
but a matter of fact that several specialists would definitely leave Greenville
for better facilities elsewhere if no bond issue were passed.
Tucker and
several others asked whether it was possible as a temporary alternative
to start construction on the 42-bed addition above the emergency area
of the hospital, an addition expected to cost about $340,000. He described
the results of a January visit by an engineer from the N.C. Insurance
Department. The engineer had inspected the hospital to determine what
changes would be necessary if a three-story addition were added over the
emergency room.
The commissioners
said the county had no money to begin the smaller project before a bond
issue passed, adding that until then private donations would probably
be the only solution. They suggested that ECU might provide some funds
if a bond issue passed, to ensure access to community facilities for teaching.
Vocational Rehabilitation, then planning to make Greenville a regional
center, might help, and there might be funds from other private and public
sources. Donations, grants, or other funding would decrease the amount
of bonds that would have to be sold. The $9 million figure was a maximum.
Kenneth Dews,
former chairman of the hospital board, declared, Weve investigated
every angle now, and all the time the needs of the hospital have been
growing. We are outdated as far as space and medical equipment go. From
here on out, its up to the people. If they see the need, well
have an updated hospital that will keep the fine diversified medical staff
we now have and probably attract others. If they do not, well lose
many doctors and many people will have to go elsewhere for medical attention.
Also, I believe we will have to sell out to a private firm and let the
people pay their profit-making prices.
On June 16,
1970, the hospital trustees passed a resolution formally requesting that
the county commissioners call for a referendum in November to grant the
board authority to issue up to $9 million in bonds for additional hospital
facilities.The referendum was timed to coincide with the general election.
The commissioners
and hospital board had been assuming that the county would have to raise
all the money for improving the hospital. The campaign for the bond issue
had begun with this supposition. Then on June 18, 1970, the Hill-Burton
Act that provided direct grants for hospital construction was passed again
by the U.S. House of Representatives and immediately vetoed by President
Richard Nixon. Just five days later, Congress overrode the vetothe
first time in 10 years that they had done soand reinstated the $1.26
billion in grants over the next three years. The House had included an
additional $1.5 billion in guaranteed loans, and a provision that the
administration must spend the money, not simply ignore it as past presidents
had done.
Dean
Monroe wrote urging the county commissioners and the hospital board to
include facilities that met national accreditation standards in their
planning. He also pointed out the need for providing outpatient clinics,
for meeting Medicare and Medicaid requirements, and for including accommodations
to furnish experience in patient care to medical and nursing students,
residents, and paramedical personnel. Some of the more conservative members
of the medical staff found the concept of outpatient care inconsistent
with their views of the functions of a hospital.
On July 7,
the county commissioners passed a resolution proposing a $9 million bond
referendum to be held on November 3. The next night, the Greenville Chamber
of Commerce and Merchants Association sponsored a Medical Awareness
Meeting at the Candlewick Inn, attended by about 50 businessmen
and their wives. Dr. Don Tucker spoke to the group about the history of
the expansion project. Jack Richardson, assistant administrator of the
hospital, presented a summary of activities over the previous three years.
Woodrow W. Wooten, a merchant and farmer from Falkland, who served as
chairman of the hospital board, commented on the history of the hospital,
and led a question and answer session. A Chamber of Commerce member, Bill
McDonald, commented that he had not favored the bond issue for the hospital
until he had attended the Medical Awareness Meeting and heard
Dr. Tuckers and Richardsons presentations.
Harold Creech,
Chamber of Commerce manager, and Gene Skinner, its president, pledged
the organizations help on the bond issue, and were assured that
their help would be needed and appreciated.
On August 3, 1970, the Pitt County Board of Commissioners finally approved
holding the $9 million referendum in November, for the purpose of
paying the cost of construction or acquisition of an addition to the Pitt
County Memorial Hospital.
Why
Renovate When You Can Build?
A
delegation composed of the executive committee of the hospital trustees,
several members of the medical staff, and several county commissioners
went to Raleigh on August 6 to meet again with representatives of the
NC Medical Care Commission. At the meeting they were persuaded that expansion
of the old hospital was not the way to go. Woodrow Wooten, chairman of
the board of trustees, clarified the reasons for their change of mind:
We had been convinced until that time that we would be able to get
no Hill-Burton money, that all funds would have to be local, so we decided
on the least... expensive method of getting better facilities. This led
us to choose a plan of adding rooms over the emergency wing of the present
hospital and building an annex which would house the bulk of the ancillary
facilities like operating room, labs, and X-ray rooms, and most of the
bedrooms, also.
At the August
6 meeting, however, Bill Henderson, executive secretary of the Medical
Care Commission, told us he was confident we could receive an outright
grant. He hinted at not less than $2 million. He urged us to change our
plansto build a facility that would be adequate for many years.
Hill-Burton funds, once they are allocated, are usually not available
again to the same area for at least 15 years, he said.
Why, he asked,
and we asked ourselves, should we spend $9 million on additions and renovations,
when for $11 million we can have a new facility, extra land, and a building
to either sell or use to boot?
Commissioner Bob Martin said that what he had heard at the Raleigh meeting
had changed his mind. The county attorney would be instructed to begin
work right away on amending the bond issue application if the hospital
trustees and medical staff would submit a formal written request to do
so. The trustees and staff met on August 19 to discuss the proposal to
build a new hospital rather than remodel and renovate the old one. After
the meeting, they formally requested a change in the application for a
bond referendum. County Attorney W.W. Speight began on August 20 to modify
the bond issue application, designating the funds to be for a new hospital
instead of changes and additions to the old one.
The new hospital
would be built on a site still to be chosen. On the advice of the Medical
Care Commission, at least 100 acres would be purchased to allow for parking
and possible future expansion of the building. The hospital trustees instructed
the architects to plan a hospital with 350 private rooms and sufficient
space and foundation for adding more beds later on.
The commissioners
took the final step toward the bond referendum on September 8, when they
instructed the county attorney to proceed with the public notices for
the amended bond issue. On September 10, notices were published in the
Daily Reflector of the election to be held on November 3 and of the intention
to apply to the Local Government Commission to have the $9 million of
bonds approved.
On September
16, 1970, the 22nd anniversary of the vote for the bonds that had funded
Pitt Memorial Hospital, J. W. Pou, vice president of Wachovia Bank and
Trust Company became general chairman of a citizens committee to
seek funding for a new hospital with 330 beds. Pous selection as
chairman was a wise move. In addition to being a respected businessman,
he also had strong ties to a number of influential farmers in the county,
many of whom were reluctant to support the higher taxes that would surely
result from the bond issue.
Many other
Greenville business people and professionals enlisted to carry the message
to the public.
In November
1970, Pitt Countys citizens reluctantly took a major step forward,
by responding favorably to the referendum on a special bond issue. They
approved $9 million in bondsby a scant 12 votes.
In the spring
of 1971, the county bought 97.5 acres of land near the old hospital to
provide a site for the new one. The commissioners had definite building
plans drawn up, taking into account the present and projected needs of
the hospital, as well as the needs of the medical program being planned
at East Carolina University.
On October
11, 1971, the Pitt County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution to
expand the project by establishing a Regional Rehabilitation Center as
part of the new PCMH. They committed $881,000 toward constructing the
55-bed rehabilitation center, the balance to be provided from federal
and state rehabilitation grants. The change in plans increased the cost
of the project to $13.8 million. The committed funds still left a shortage
of $3.3 million over the funds provided by the bond issue and the rehabilitation
grants.
Funding
the Building
On
August 2, 1972, the Daily Reflector noted that a Memorial Gifts committee
had been established for the new hospital. The $3 million fund shortage
still had to be made up. Some of the difference between the funds already
allocated and the total needed, it was expected, would be made up from
Hill-Burton grants and contributions. The Duke Endowment was expected
to assist, and other foundations were being approached for support. Memorial
gifts had already been received to the D. L. Moore Memorial Fund and the
Dorcas Highsmith Memorial Fund. The Memorial Gifts committee was to approach
individuals, families, and organizations for gifts to cover deficits and
provide added facilities.
On the same
day, Burroughs-Wellcome Co. announced a donation of $30,000. The funds
were earmarked for the Brooks Memorial Hemodialysis Unit of six beds included
in the new hospitals plans.
During August,
the county commissioners were compelled to apply for a $2 million loan
guaranteed by the federal Health, Education and Welfare Department. The
architects continued to work on the plans for the building, with the fall
of 1973 targeted for soliciting construction bids.
In November
1973, bids were taken for the hospital construction, coming in at $2 million
above the estimated cost of the project and the money then available.
During more than a month of negotiations, some cuts were made in the plans,
and additional funds secured: a $280,100 grant from the state Medical
Care Commission, $250,000 provided by the hospital board of trustees from
reserve funds, and $537,645 from the county commissioners, to come out
of revenue. It was now possible to accept the bids for building the hospital,
and for work to begin. Most of the funding came from the $9 million bond
issue, as planned, with the direct loan of $2 million from HEW, the $1.69
million federal and state rehabilitation funds, the $750,000 grant from
the Duke Endowment, and $685,800 in federal revenue sharing.
In October
1973, the organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries raised oil prices
by 70 percent, and in December, by an additional 130 percent in retaliation
against supporters of Israel in the Yom Kippur War. At the same time they
placed an embargo on oil shipments to the United States. Two results of
the oil shortage were lines of automobiles, more than five miles long
in large cities, waiting at gasoline stations, though the price of gasoline
moved uppremium grade approached 50 cents per gallon for the first
time in historyand a sharp decrease in gasoline tax collections.
By December, 99 percent of the gasoline stations in the U.S. were closing
voluntarily to save fuel. Stations regulated sales by selling on odd and
even days respectively to customers with odd- and even-numbered license
plates. Along with the inconvenience and high gasoline prices, the oil
shortage brought about a budgetary shortfall in North Carolina.
On February
8, 1974, the Pitt County Board of Commissioners offered to sell the existing
Pitt Memorial Hospital building to ECU for a medical school, as soon as
the new county hospital was completed in mid-1976.
ECU Chancellor
Leo Jenkins said that Pitt Countys offer to sell the hospital to
the university might be helpful to ECU in its efforts to expand. This
expression on the part of the county authorities is welcome and exciting
news, Dr. Ed Monroe said. The present hospital facilities
offer great potential in the future development of the medical school
and the other health-related schools of the university, as well as possible
future potential for a wide range of community-university partnership
efforts in student training and health services in this area of the state.
Building
on Stantonsburg Road
On
Valentines Day, 1974, a groundbreaking ceremony inaugurated construction
of the new Pitt County Memorial Hospital on Stantonsburg Road, a short
distance from the existing hospital. A light rain fell as a small group
of spectators observed members of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners
and hospital representatives turn the first spadefuls of dirt for the
construction. It was to include a 315-bed acute care hospital and a 55-bed
regional rehabilitation center, and was scheduled for completion in September,
1976. R. L. Bob Martin, chairman of the county commissioners,
said the new facility would tie in with development of the ECU medical
school.
On that same day, Chancellor Jenkins wrote to Martin, I am extremely
gratified that you and the other members of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners
have offered to make the present county hospital and its surrounding county-owned
land available to us in the future development of the East Carolina University
School of Medicine. He commented that the lack of adequate facilities
for clinical teaching had become an issue in the conflict over expanding
the medical school. Pitt Countys far-sighted and generous
action should lay this spurious argument to rest, he said.
Jack Richardson,
who had succeeded C.D. Ward as PCMH administrator in 1971, recruited Ralph
Hall, construction manager at Lenoir Memorial Hospital in Kinston, to
supervise the building of the hospital. He came to Greenville in July
1973. The hospital was the first of the more than 25 construction projects
overseen by Hall during his tenure of over two decades as vice president
for facilities services.
Piedmont newspapers
continued to follow the political machinations over starting a medical
school in Greenville. On July 31, 1974, the Greensboro Daily News reported
that ECU would like to purchase land near the new PCMH and retain an architect
to begin planning the new medical science building, but that the UNC-Chapel
Hill medical school administration had refused to release any of the $15
million appropriated by the legislature for development of the school.
The spirit
of perseverance remained evident at a September 1974 dinner held at the
Greenville Golf and Country Club to initiate a $1 million fund-raising
campaign for the hospital. Keynote speaker Lt. Gov. James B Hunt, Jr.,
leveled criticism at those who opposed the success of the medical school
at ECU, continuing to resist its expansion and the addition of a
second-year program despite the mandate of the General Assembly that this
be done.
Movement
Toward Affiliation
In
July, ECU medical school officials had arranged for medical students to
use Cherry Hospital in Goldsboro for instructional purposes. In August,
Pitt Memorial Hospital had taken a step toward relieving the pressure
for a formal relationship with ECU by crafting an agreement with the medical
school that would probably mean students could get clinical experience
at the hospital. The agreement was only a general one, stating PCMHs
desire to work with ECU. Before the end of the year, the trustees and
medical staff of Lenoir Memorial Hospital had voted to provide ECU medical
students with in-service education. Affiliation plans soon hit a snag,
however. The Medical Liaison Committee of PCMH, chaired by Dr. Jack Wilkerson,
carefully considered the pre-affiliation agreement that had been offered
by the UNC planners in August. The agreement was based on a non-traditional
eight-year program in which students would spend their first and fourth
years at ECU. This program would start after the sophomore or junior year
in college, and run through a three-year residency in family practice.
As the planning
groups were discussing the affiliation between the hospital and the medical
school, open conflict also arose between UNC-CH Dean Christopher Fordham
and the medical staff of PCMH about the requirements for using the hospital
as a teaching facility under his curriculum plan. Richardson noted that
the limited clinical facilities in Greenville could make a second-year
medical program at ECU a bit awkward and crowded during late 1975 and
1976, before the new building was completed, but indicated that the hospital
could certainly handle this problem temporarily.
The liaison
committee concluded in September that it was not satisfactory to allocate
75 beds as teaching beds under the administration of the ECU medical school
for 30-40 medical students and for the hospital to accommodate 16 full-time
clinical teaching faculty and two non-physician professionals, along with
six to eight pathologists. Further, the proposal suggested that the hospital
should provide an outpatient facility and that staff doctors be available
for teaching, with individual exceptions.
Wilkerson
relayed his committees suggestion that the Eastern Area Health Education
Center provide the outpatient clinic, and that office space for the clinical
teaching faculty should be furnished in the $15 million basic science
building that was to be constructed. He emphasized that these matters
were out of the committees jurisdiction, but said that the committee
had previously endorsed the concept of affiliation with ECU. Their approval
had been based on the understanding that the ECU program would add a traditional
second year class.
In the conflict
over affiliation, the medical school staff were torn between their community
care responsibilities and the responsibilities they felt to educate more
doctors. Dr. Fordham acknowledged this dilemma in a September 18 meeting
and expressed his concern that PCMH officials felt UNC planners were imposing
their plan on the hospital. He emphasized that UNC did not originate the
hospitals dilemma and was sympathetic, reminding all that the demands
of Section 46 of the General Assembly mandate required adequate resources
for clinical teaching.
The question
of jurisdiction and appropriate allocation of resources remained a sticking
point through September negotiations, as the hospitals medical education
liaison committee reviewed the latest agreement submitted by UNC. Speaking
for the committee, Wilkerson noted that the group felt it essential that
the hospital retain administrative control over all its beds. In addition,
he related that some of the hospitals staff strongly opposed the
UNC policy of paying hospital staff for teaching only after the first
50 hours a year, which were to be donated. He noted that the committee
could agree, with these reservations, to provide the necessary clinical
facilities. The hospital staff had directed the committee to proceed with
the negotiations.
The committee
wrote on October 3 to the UNC planners endorsing the ECU medical faculty
program. The letter reiterated the hospitals primary goal of serving
Pitt County residents. It stated that no beds would be allocated solely
for use by medical school faculty. It also expressed the committees
unanimous support for the curriculum proposed by the ECU medical school
faculty, and urged that the Executive Committee of the ECU Medical School
faculty should be involved in further deliberations.
These sentiments
became more public in a statement on October 7, 1974, to the Daily Reflector.
Dr. John Wooten, hospital chief of staff, reiterated the committees
position against committing 75 beds to teaching, as recommended by the
UNC planners. Pitt County citizens are building the new hospital,
and were not about to relinquish control of a large part of the
facility before its a reality. The ECU people tell us its
not necessary for the medical school to control the beds in order to teach
in a hospital, and we know there are hospitals in the country used by
medical schools which do not have such an arrangement.
Meanwhile
the UNC administration in Chapel Hill became more frustrated. At an October
7 meeting of his Advisory Committee on the ECU School of Medicine, Dr.
Fordham discussed the correspondence leading up to the PCMH Liaison Committees
letter of October 3. He related that he was almost certain that ECU would
not accept any supervision by UNC, any changes, or any ideas. Any LCME
team visiting the Greenville campus would observe the hostility of the
East Carolina faculty and administration toward UNC, making doubtful any
cooperative arrangement between the two campuses with Chapel Hill in command.
With his efforts to set up a school under UNCs control persistently
thwarted, Fordham wrote in his journal that he was beginning to wonder
whether establishing a freestanding four-year medical school at ECU could
be avoided.
The
Choice Between an Independent Teaching Hospital and Affiliation
A
pivotal moment occurred on November 9, when UNC President William C. Friday
recommended that the UNC Board of Governors authorize a four-year medical
school with its own 200-bed teaching hospital at East Carolina University.
He said that a two-year medical school could cost as much as $45 million
to build and $10 million a year to operate, without increasing the number
of doctors being trained in North Carolina. A teaching hospital costing
$20 million would still be necessary even if the schools curriculum
were only increased to two years.
Citing these
reasons, President Friday lent his support to the four-year program in
Greenville. He said that a new hospital could be finished by the fall
of 1979. He also proposed building a $29 million clinical science building
to be completed by the fall of 1978 and a $1.1 million outpatient clinic.
The plan the UNC Board of Governors submitted to the General Assembly
included a $20 million teaching hospital for ECU. For the time being,
affiliation between the medical school and Pitt County Memorial Hospital
appeared to be in abeyance.
The next hurdle
lay with the states health facilities planning office. On November
28, 1974, the planning office director, Lawrence Burwell, expressed concern
that building a new hospital in Greenville could draw patients away from
other hospitals in the area and increase hospital care costs. Many eastern
North Carolina hospitals were operating below their capacity, he said,
and losing more patients could make fee increases necessary.
Burwells
office would have to approve the project in order for the hospital to
be eligible for federal reimbursement through such programs as Medicare
and Medicaid. The decision would be based on need, impact on other hospitals
in the region, impact on healthcare cost, and estimation of the likely
efficiency of the proposed hospital.
The state
Department of Revenue reported just after the middle of December that
revenue had begun to grow again, so that legislators who argued that there
would be insufficient funds for the medical school could no longer support
that argument. On December 19, the UNC board of governors released $2.5
million of the $15 million medical education reserve fund to ECU, to be
used mostly for planning. The board earmarked $698,000 for planning a
200-bed teaching hospital, $853,000 for planning the $26 million basic
science building, $55,000 for planning an outpatient facility, $50,000
for planning interim clinical and library facilities.
ECU forged
ahead. On Tuesday, January 7, 1975, Chancellor Jenkins announced that
ECUs medical school would be located on a 50-acre site near the
new PCMH. He indicated the land would be purchased that week. The basic
medical science complex and a teaching hospital would cost $40 to $50
million, Jenkins said.
Jenkins revealed
that the plans included helicopter facilities for emergency and other
medical services in a 75- to 100-mile radius. This plan addressed the
inadequacy of roads for transporting patients quickly.
Continuing,
he stated the medical school would work closely with the EAHEC in Greenville,
which would rotate medical students from teaching facilities to hospitals
in the 24-county area it served.
The General
Assembly still faced the shortage in revenue that the recession had brought
about, and wrestled with the problem of identifying funds to carry out
the ECU project to which a majority of legislators had committed themselves
during the previous session. On January 24, 1975, Representative Horton
Rountree mentioned publicly for the first time that changing plans for
the ECU medical school might mean that it would not need all of the $54
million set aside for it by the Advisory Budget Committee. The university
and PCMH were discussing arrangements for providing clinical training
facilities at the new hospital being built at a cost of $16 million. This
arrangement might make it unnecessary to use all of the $20 million budgeted
for a teaching hospital.
Chancellor
Jenkins responded that it would be premature to say that the $20 million
would not be needed. It might become possible, and ECU would welcome any
means of saving money, as long as the medical school program did not suffer.
He said the $35.2 million 1975-77 appropriation for ECUs four-year
school was absolutely essential.
In response,
the hospitals medical staff had reaffirmed its desire to affiliate
with the ECU medical school. Jack W. Richardson, PCMH administrator, said
the hospital staff has issued an invitation to the school of medicine
to enter into a relationship so it can practice medicine and educate medical
students, as guests of Pitt Memorial Hospital . . . [with] all serving
at the pleasure of the board of trustees and the Board of County Commissioners
. . . in a real spirit of cooperation.
The medical
staff emphasized, he said, that the hospital should continue to
be Pitt Memorial Hospital and its ownership maintained by the county,
and that the cost of medical education be borne by the state.
The medical staff agreed there should be no duplication of facilities
in this community.
Richardson said that the local physicians who practiced at the hospital
recognized the need for medical education. They had offered a set
of principles for affiliation with the understanding that the teaching
program be adjunctive to the purpose of providing medical services to
the people . . . He also said that the medical staff recommended
that another bed tower be considered for the new hospital
being constructed, so enough beds to take care of teaching needs
will be available.
Meanwhile,
the county commissioners lent tentative support to the medical school.
Chairman Bruce Strickland stated, This commission will work with
the medical school . . . any time they are willing to work with us.
He also said, We have offered them the old hospital building, but
we dont want to get into competition with the medical school.
Establishment of a separate teaching hospital could lead to competition
between the two hospitals, Strickland opined, but having the medical school
base its clinical program at PCMH could add prestige to the county
operation.
Competition
from a 200-Bed Teaching Hospital
An
editorial on February 1, 1975, in the Raleigh News and Observer, a long-standing
opponent of the school of medicine, commented that the PCMH medical staff
in reasserting its wish to affiliate with the ECU medical school had substantially
qualified its proposal. It said that the hospital staff and Pitt
County commissioners were concerned about competition for patients by
medical school faculty and by a 200-bed teaching hospital. They were uneasy
about any affiliation agreement that might put a large portion of PCMH
under administrative control of the medical school, but recognized that
even the most disadvantageous affiliation might be better than competing
with a teaching hospital.
Planning for
the school had not been completed, and difficulties in recruiting a dean
and faculty might still be made difficult by tensions between the private
physicians in the area and those paid by the state. Chancellor Leo Jenkins
denied any misunderstanding or disagreement between local medical practitioners,
the hospital, and ECU planners.
In an address
to the local Rotary Club, Jenkins outlined the planning that was under
way. He said that primary care medicine would be emphasized, and that
there would soon be residency programs in family practice. In addition,
the university would cooperate with local physicians and the Eastern AHEC
to set up residencies in medicine, pediatrics, gynecology, and obstetrics.
Faced with
the prospect of a competing teaching and research hospital, on March 12
PCMHs medical staff agreed to offer the hospital as the primary
clinical training facility for the school of medicine. A formal document,
entitled Principles of a Proposed Affiliation Agreement by the Pitt
County Memorial Hospital and East Carolina University School of Medicine,
was to go before the hospital board of trustees the following week.
Some still
had reservations. Dr. Eric Fearrington, hospital chief of staff, noted
that the proposed agreement was not a legal document, but
just principles for an agreement. He explained that there
were three parties concerned with any affiliation agreement.
These were first the hospital, including its staff and board of trustees,
second the University and its medical staff and board of trustees, and
third the national accrediting agency.
The agreement
accepted by the medical staff had been developed over many months by the
medical liaison committee of the hospital, working with the medical schools
administration, Kenneth Dews from the hospital board of trustees, and
Charles Gaskins from the Pitt County commissioners. They had no template
to follow, since the agreement was the first of its kind. It was in later
years taken as a model by a number of other institutions across the country.
The provisions
of the affiliation agreement included these items:
1. PCMH board
of trustees would continue to administer the hospital, with 33 percent
of its members representing
the university;
2. with the
complete knowledge and consent of the patient and the attending physician,
all patients would be
available for the teaching program;
3. patients
from Pitt County would have priority for admission, in accordance with
need;
4. an open
staff would be maintained, i. e., private physicians at PCMH, could decline
to participate in the program
and remain on the staff;
5. additional
beds and supporting teaching facilities would be added to the new PCMH
at the expense of the State
of North Carolina;
6. the chairmen
of the clinical departments at the university would administer hospital
services internally, with
an advisory committee including non-university physicians to provide checks,
balances, and review for
the system.
The medical
staff had approved the principles by a large margin and had recommended
that the hospitals board should also approve, Fearrington said.
This approach to use Pitt County Memorial Hospital as the primary
teaching center for the university will sort of obviate the need of having
two separate hospitals in this community. PCMH medical staff members
and university officials had expressed a great deal of concern that the
two hospitals might be standing side-by-side with about 50 percent
occupancy. . . a very expensive situation. I think this will save our
citizens money.
Administrator
Richardson confirmed, I think it shows there is firm support for
the medical school at ECU, with 85 percent [of the medical staff] voting
to recommend to the trustees the acceptance of the principles. Fearrington
noted that the financial side of the joint venture would be up to the
county commissioners and the hospital board, and was outside the authority
of the medical staff. Richardson agreed, and said it would be the responsibility
of the trustees and commissioners to set up a formal contract between
PCMH and ECU.
On March 18,
1975, the PCMH board of trustees of Pitt County Memorial Hospital approved
the affiliation agreement. For the benefit of any board members who had
not seen it, Dr. Eric Fearrington read the agreement reached by the liaison
committee on which he served.
Rainy weather
during March had greatly hampered hospital construction. Ralph Hall, who
was directing the construction, reported to the board that the foundation
was completed and the structural steel almost all in place. Twenty-five
percent of the work was complete, he said, and $5.2 million had been paid
out so far.
The financial
outlook for a separate state-supported teaching hospital was starting
to look gloomier, however. On March 30, 1975, the Raleigh News & Observer
reported that revenue forecasts for the state were again increasingly
pessimistic. It commented that the $20 million teaching hospital at ECU
might be in for some cuts. It quoted Lt. Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr. as saying
he would prefer for the medical school to use the existing facilities
at PCMH. The $15 million budgeted for the rest of the ECU school is
less in doubt, Hunt said, and would probably survive any budget
cuts.
The states
budget problems gave UNC-CH officials new impetus in their quest for reasons
that it was impractical to set up a new teaching hospital in Greenville
and expand the ECU medical school. Claiborne Jones, UNC vice chancellor
for business and finance, said in an interview reported in The Chapel
Hill Newspaper that if the legislature allocated funds for a four-year
school and associated teaching hospital, it would have spent more money
at one time than it had spent over a period of 23 years on the Chapel
Hill medical school and teaching hospital. Such statements served to discourage
setting up a separate teaching hospital in Greenville, and so to encourage
development of PCMH as the medical schools teaching facility.
Felix Joyner,
UNC vice president for finance, an inveterate opponent of the Greenville
medical school, stated that he knew of no federal funds available for
a teaching hospital. Washingtons requirements on building new teaching
hospitals were very strict, and he assumed the lack of federal assistance
for ECUs plans showed that the need for a hospital had not been
demonstrated.
A third UNC
source who asked not to be identified said that the chances of ECUs
obtaining federal funds were very remote. It was difficult to show adequately
that a hospital was needed because the four closest urban areas, Wilson,
Rocky Mount, Goldsboro, and Kinston, had new, underutilized hospitals.
The Division of Facility Services of the N.C. Department of Human Resources
had reported that all four cities were served by hospitals less than 10
years old, and three of the hospitals averaged 35-40 percent empty beds.
The case for
PCMH and the medical school to affiliate grew stronger with every statement
made by UNC officials. The advantages for the hospital of avoiding competition
with an academic hospital were clear. The advantages of decreasing the
costs of providing teaching facilities in a time of tight budgets became
more and more distinct. In Raleigh, UNC Vice President for Academic Affairs
Raymond Dawson told legislators on April 30, 1975 that if the ECU medical
school reached an agreement to use PCMH facilities rather than building
a teaching hospital, $6-8 million could be cut from the $20 million proposed
for a new 200-bed facility. Adding 100-150 teaching beds to the new Pitt
County hospital while it was still under construction made the budget
decrease possible.
Affiliation
is the Right Way to Go
That
same day, UNC President Friday recommended to the Senate appropriations
subcommittee on education ways to cut the UNC budget. The subcommittee
agreed and voted to cut $7 million from a request for $35.2 million in
funds for constructing facilities at the ECU medical school. Friday said
the money would not be needed because of plans to use the new PCMH as
a teaching facility. He said medical educators had almost reached agreement
with Pitt County officials and the PCMH medical staff.
Support for
affiliation gained momentum in the east. Local officials saw the establishment
of a medical center in Greenville as important for the city and the region.
It would become a focus for development of the entire eastern part of
the state, encouraging the building of four-lane highways and new growth
in the entire economy. The Raleigh News & Observer reported that as
early as 1967, Greenville had the aspiration to become the medical,
higher education, cultural, and entertainment center of the coastal plain,
as well as the economic center. With a new medical school in sight,
the city was well on its way to achieving its goal.
On June 2,
1975, the Raleigh News & Observer, in character to the end, made another
feeble attack on the project of building a hospital in Greenville. It
wrote that, by federal standards, North Carolina had too many hospital
beds, and eastern North Carolina, where a declining population was projected,
had a larger surplus than other areas of the state. Even without the new
ECU wing of PCMH, hospitals in Pitt County and surrounding areas would
be only 60 percent occupied in 1980. With the ECU beds added in, HEW predicted
56 percent occupancy, and state planners who used different baselines
from HEW in estimating hospital bed needs predicted only 75 percent occupancy
in 1980. The newspaper commented that if a national health insurance program
were passed, both formulas would become useless.
The long-awaited
affiliation agreement between ECU and PCMH was announced on June 12, 1975.
ECU Chancellor Jenkins, Vice Chancellor Monroe, and Dr. Harold Wiggers,
acting dean of the medical school, appeared before the UNC Board of Governors
Planning Committee to report that ECU had reached an agreement with the
hospital and the county to use the hospital for teaching. The agreement
would take effect upon approval by the UNC board and by national accreditation
officials. The hospital would maintain control over all the beds, but
ECU representatives would hold at least a third of the board seats.
The expansion
of the hospital also had to be approved by the Comprehensive Health Planning
Section of the N.C. Department of Human Resources in order for the new
hospital to be eligible for Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements. The
approval process was expected to take at least 45 days.
The perennial
opponent to the ECU medical school, Felix Joyner, UNC vice president for
finance, asked what would happen to the bed tower if the agreement collapsed
after several years. He answered his own question: The state would
probably have built the county a nice big hospital. |