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News that the Caritas Carney Hospital in
Dorchester could sell or close has sparked concern
among legislators and health care industry leaders,
who called the facility both a health care and
employment provider. People who spoke with hospital
president, Dan O'Leary, at this morning's Greater
Boston Chamber of Commerce breakfast said he was
blindsided by Boston Globe revelations that the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston was
considering moves to sell or shut down the fiscally
struggling hospital.
The144-year-old hospital's role in the city as a
less expensive alternative and provider of
non-intensive care is important, said hospital
supporters who predicted a battle to salvage the
facility.
"It serves people that ordinarily, in the inner
city, might not get served, that might be reluctant
to go into downtown Boston," said state Senator
Jack Hart. "So there's a relationship that people
have with this hospital, almost as if it's a second
home to them. We understand the financial
difficulties that Carney Hospital has, but that's
because of the people that they serve, and they
should not be penalized that they are serving
people differently than the people that the
Newton-Wellesley Hospitals serve."
Sen. Richard Moore, co-chair of the Committee on
Health Care Financing, said the state could play a
role in aiding the Carney, examining the
competitive pressures it faces and considering the
use of state resources like the essential community
provider fund, which he said helped keep afloat a
Springfield hospital. The fund awarded the Carney
$4 million earlier this month.
-State House News Service
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