LSU downsizing could cost $83 million more

LSU health executives project major shortfalls

Downsizing throughout LSU’s 10 public hospital system creates an $83 million budget shortage in its medical school programs, LSU health care executives said Friday.

Medical school funding relies on revenues from hospital operations and reductions in bed capacity and services translates into less money, LSU System Executive Vice President Dr. Frank Opelka said.

The shortage came as a surprise to members of the LSU Board of Supervisors, who recently approved a plan to cut $150 million out of operations of seven LSU hospitals in south Louisiana.

Other cuts are under way at the three hospitals in north Louisiana based on an earlier round of reductions.

The Jindal administration handed nearly $330 million in cuts to LSU hospitals after Congress ordered — after the state budget went into effect July 1 — reductions in federal support for the state’s Medicaid program, and thereby required state government to pay more of the costs.

Opelka told the LSU Board that the problem surfaced as officials worked on plans to move graduate medical education programs currently housed in the LSU hospitals to the private sector.

“When we shift this business out ... we will lose cash-flow for a time,” Opelka said.

Later, he said, “It takes three years to catch up. During that time period the cost to the (medical) schools is substantial.”

Opelka said about $53 million will be lost as a result of cutbacks at the seven LSU hospitals in the Health Care Services Division which includes those in Baton Rouge, Lafayette, New Orleans, Houma, Bogalusa, Independence and Lake Charles.

In LSU Health Care Services Division hospitals, about 250 residents — recent medical school graduates completing their training to become fully licensed — out of about 800 residents are scheduled to move to another hospital setting because of reductions in services and more heavy reliance on private hospitals to care for the poor and uninsured.

Dr. Robert Barish, chancellor of LSU Health Sciences Center in Shreveport, said another $30 million would be lost to medical school financing there. Hospitals in Monroe and Pineville are under the LSU Shreveport group.

LSU Health Sciences Center-New Orleans Chancellor Dr. Larry Hollier said medical schools in Shreveport and New Orleans rely heavily on the public hospitals for financial support.

“I do not have the revenues to cover $53 million over the next 18 months,” Hollier told the board. Hollier said efforts are under way to identify a funding source, but “I have some concern about it obviously.”

Hollier said the financial shortfall could present problems with accrediting agencies for both physician training programs and medical schools.

He said the medical school group requires $78 million to $100 million in cash reserves in the event of revenue losses.

“The $53 million gap in the next 18 months would be about half of my cash reserves. We have to find an answer to this,” Hollier said.

John George, who chairs the LSU Board’s health care-medical education committee, said the finding the revenues to pay for LSU graduate medical education, or GME, programs “is going to fall squarely on this board. It’s an $80 million to $100 million problem and it’s not going to go away.”

LSU Board member Rolfe McCollister said LSU could potentially generate revenues through the lease or sale of some of its facilities to private partners.

Opelka said leasing some of its hospitals to the private sector could be “a step to shrink the hole.”

“We are not able to make that much money to pay for GME. It’s the state’s obligation to pay for GME,” said George, referring to graduate medical education or physician training. “If we cut these hospitals this is going to fall squarely on us.”


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Comments (12)


1) Comment by jaywhy321 - 28/10/2012

>The national accrediation organization for GME has already been asking questions and this will certainly increase their concern and attention.< Exactly! We in the state have no control over what lil Bobby's henchmen on the board do. However, they don't want to mess around with the accreditation body and lil Bobby and Opelka won't be able to gloss over that one. >Rolfe McCollister said LSU could potentially generate revenues through the lease or sale of some of its facilities to private partners.< Yep, I guess they could sell that brand-new not opened new medical center in Nola since they won't have the docs or the patients to be in it.

2) Comment by beabea - 27/10/2012

This should come as no surprise to anyone who understands that government spending does in fact generate tangible economic activity, so that when you cut that spending too much the economic activity it generated, goes away too. Bobby has really hit the trifecta here: reckless cuts that hurt health care, education, and the economy generally. But that's what we get when we're stuck with a governor who has hitched his delusions about a future in national politics, to slavish adherence to a crackpot economic theory decades of experience have proved does not work.

3) Comment by welcometothebananarepublic - 27/10/2012

Just because you run a fishwrap "business report" or make sausage doesn't mean you can make serious decisions about a university. It is crystal clear the newly appointed LSU board does not have a clue what they are doing. In fact, it's becoming clear the board is unnecessary since they mindlessly rubberstamp whatever Jindal and his overpaid staff demand. Every LSU alumni should be alarmed that all decisions about the future of the alma mater are now made in the best interest of Bobby Jindal's political career. For my part, I will not donate any more money to the university, foundation, or alumni association.

4) Comment by Benimillo - 27/10/2012

Has McCollister ever managed to generate a useful or constructive solution on anything that diverges from his instruction manual?

5) Comment by jeffsadow - 27/10/2012

McCollister has the right idea. Here's the model to follow: http://arklatexhomepage.com/fulltext?nxd_id=271002

6) Comment by RODEO CLOWN - 27/10/2012

"Great Leap Forward" I think not. If anything, Jindal has made every effort to retrograde Louisiana back to the pre Huey Long era. What's next Bobby? Selling the Mississippi River bridges for scrap? Making school children pay for their text books? Your administration has already decimated the public health system in Louisiana, all the while, allowing oil companies exemption from severance taxes on oil and gas, frivolously granting tax exemptions as "inducements" to companies without requiring any standards for employment. (Aside: will SHAW INDUSTRIES be required to reimburse the state for any/all of the "generous" tax incentives granted to keep them in Louisiana now that SHAW has been sold and is moving to Texas-which by the way granted zero incentives to the company that purchased SHAY.) Actually, I'm of the fervent impression, Jindal wants to make this state into something resembling his homeland, INDIA...after all, it works over there, why not here?(being factitious of course)

7) Comment by Murphy1 - 27/10/2012

If they really didn't see this coming, then they are not qualified to be on the board. They should realize by now that the governor wants to privatize everything no matter the consequences for the populace of Louisiana.

8) Comment by 8.3 - 27/10/2012

Ironic that the law of unintended consequences may cause Jindal's signature policies for propelling him into the world of power may also be the reason for his downfall. Of course, truth and reality really don't seem to be relevant, only the lust for power.

9) Comment by morellok2 - 27/10/2012

So how is it that this comes as a surprise? I thought the boy wonder was such a genius when it comes managing healthcare. If that is the case, then he knew this was going to happen. All of us best start worrying because if our best and brightest medical school graduates go out of state for residency training the chances of their coming back to the state to practice are slim and none. This means even those with the financial means or health insurance to pay for their care will not have doctors available even though they can pay. The national accrediation organization for GME has already been asking questions and this will certainly increase their concern and attention. Doesn't it seem strange that news like this comes out on a weekend? Guess it will be out of the headlines by Monday when folks start paying attention again! You can bet that the applicant pool for LSU residency programs for next year will be very small if any. Then as that goes forward there will be fewer and fewer residents who do so much of the work and are paid so much less than staff doctors and that means higher cost for caring for the poor. What kind of planning or foresight went into this? Full steam ahead for political ambition and the state be damned!!! We have gotten what we voted for.

10) Comment by Maui09 - 27/10/2012

Now, even I,a private citizen, knew that the education of our residents is funded by the hospitals. Why would this Board and Opelka be surprised? The applicants for residency training are marching like ants away from LA because of Jindal's Mighty Plot that he contrived with Alan Levine to dissolve the health care system. The work force caring for the poor, residents in training, is going to drop dramatically. Why would anyone apply to a system that is dissolving before our eyes? The problem with Jindal taking down all these hospitals is that he did not have a PLAN to deal with the aftermath. The poor are going to die. They will be TOLD TO GO HOME TO DIE for treatable disease. I guess Jindal wants to SELECT OUT those not contributing to the LA and He will decide who lives and who dies here in Louisiana. SOMEBODY WILL HAVE TO MAKE THE TOUGH DECISION OF WHO LIVES AND WHO DIES. I GUESS MASTER JINDAL WANTS THAT JOB.

11) Comment by gtinla - 27/10/2012

Jindal is Mao, and his governorship is the Great Leap Forward.

12) Comment by lovemykids - 27/10/2012

Surprise, more cuts!!!!! Jindal and his accessories need to be careful. If things go bad too quickly, Romney (if elected) won't put Jindal in his cabinet.