Council Bluffs Mercy hospital ending labor, delivery services citing providers staffing challenges

cigaretteman

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CHI Health Mercy Council Bluffs will soon end its labor and delivery services.
Bailey Nielsen, CHI Health communications manager, confirmed to The Nonpareil Wednesday that local services would be transferred to CHI Health birth centers in Omaha effective Aug. 31.
"Patients will continue seeing the same physicians and receive the same high-quality care," Nielsen said. "We’re working directly with every expectant mother to help ensure a smooth transition."




CHI Health Mercy Hospital Maternity Center Director Joanna Smith, left, and Vice President of Patient Care Services Denise McNitt tour the renovated maternity department at the Council Bluffs hospital on Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021.
JOE SHEARER, THE NONPAREIL
While labor and delivery transition, prenatal and women's health services will remain available in Council Bluffs, Nielsen said.
On Thursday, CHI Health released a statement calling the decision "difficult" and attributing it to a lack of available providers.
"This was a difficult decision and not one we made lightly," CHI Health said in the statement. "Despite our ongoing efforts, it has become increasingly difficult to sustain the provider coverage and specialized clinical support needed to operate labor and delivery and Level II NICU services over the long term. These are challenges hospitals and health systems across Iowa and the country are facing, particularly around provider availability and specialized clinical coverage."





CHI Health Mercy's maternity department was renovated in 2021.


CHI Health Mercy Hospital has put a new face on its maternity center.


In June, nonprofit consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen released a report that said Medicaid spending cuts put 446 hospitals at risk of closing or reducing services.
The report named three hospitals in Iowa as at risk of closing, including CHI Health Mercy in Council Bluffs, but it's unclear whether or how that contributed to the decision to stop offering labor and delivery services.

CHI Health said in its statement that attributing its decision to stop offering labor and delivery services at the Council Bluffs hospital "would be inaccurate."



While the cost of health care continues to rise in America, many hospitals are working to find ways to remain open or maintain their staffing.


Andy House, CHI Health's director of communications of the Midwest Division, told The Nonpareil in a phone call Thursday after the the story was initially published that "there is no risk for Mercy Council Bluffs closing."
The statement added: "Mercy Council Bluffs remains an important part of CHI Health, and we remain committed to serving the Council Bluffs community."

CHI Health's Omaha metropolitan area birth centers deliver more than 4,460 babies each year, Nielsen said, which incudes births in Council Bluffs. The health system's Omaha birth centers are located just 15 minutes away.


In April, an event hosted by the Council Bluffs Area Chamber of Commerce offered insight into the healthcare system and some of the challenges Council Bluffs’ hospitals face.



The chief executive officers of Methodist Jennie Edmundson and CHI Mercy Health hospitals spoke at a Council Bluffs Area Chamber of Commerce forum Friday morning.


The event featured David Burd and Kristin Blum, the CEOs of Methodist Jennie Edmundson Hospital and CHI Mercy Hospital respectively, as guest speakers.

Both stressed the importance of Council Bluffs’ growth to help the system maintain the current level of care.
“There will be a time, I'm the most positive, where it will be hard to argue for, and for us to get capital, to continue doing projects, to continue making our facilities better, if our community doesn't grow along with us,” Burd said in April.
"Over the last 20 years in Iowa, there has been a major decline in the number of hospitals that provide labor and delivery services, most often in rural areas," Cass Health in Atlantic said in a 2023 statement.


Outside of Council Bluffs, labor and delivery is offered at Southwest Iowa hospitals in Atlantic, Harlan and Shenandoah.
Rural patients, especially those with higher risk pregnancies who were already commuting to a larger regional center such as CHI Health Mercy, will likely need to add more time to their commute in Omaha — though many may be traveling to there for maternity care now as well.


Methodist Jennie Edmundson Hospital could also see a uptick in need for maternity care.

 
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AFM22

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At least there are 5 or more birthing hospitals in the Omaha metro, including Methodist in CB and Methodist Women's Hospital.

Really sucks for the rural Iowans that have to travel a little farther now if CHI is their network.
 
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cigaretteman

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At least there are 5 or more birthing hospitals in the Omaha metro, including Methodist in CB and Methodist Women's Hospital.

Really sucks for the rural Iowans that have to travel a little farther now if CHI is their network.
I was borned in Jenny Edmundson, long before it became Methodist Jenny Edmundson!
 
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baltimorened

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CHI Health Mercy Council Bluffs will soon end its labor and delivery services.
Bailey Nielsen, CHI Health communications manager, confirmed to The Nonpareil Wednesday that local services would be transferred to CHI Health birth centers in Omaha effective Aug. 31.
"Patients will continue seeing the same physicians and receive the same high-quality care," Nielsen said. "We’re working directly with every expectant mother to help ensure a smooth transition."




CHI Health Mercy Hospital Maternity Center Director Joanna Smith, left, and Vice President of Patient Care Services Denise McNitt tour the renovated maternity department at the Council Bluffs hospital on Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021.
JOE SHEARER, THE NONPAREIL
While labor and delivery transition, prenatal and women's health services will remain available in Council Bluffs, Nielsen said.
On Thursday, CHI Health released a statement calling the decision "difficult" and attributing it to a lack of available providers.
"This was a difficult decision and not one we made lightly," CHI Health said in the statement. "Despite our ongoing efforts, it has become increasingly difficult to sustain the provider coverage and specialized clinical support needed to operate labor and delivery and Level II NICU services over the long term. These are challenges hospitals and health systems across Iowa and the country are facing, particularly around provider availability and specialized clinical coverage."





CHI Health Mercy's maternity department was renovated in 2021.


CHI Health Mercy Hospital has put a new face on its maternity center.


In June, nonprofit consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen released a report that said Medicaid spending cuts put 446 hospitals at risk of closing or reducing services.
The report named three hospitals in Iowa as at risk of closing, including CHI Health Mercy in Council Bluffs, but it's unclear whether or how that contributed to the decision to stop offering labor and delivery services.

CHI Health said in its statement that attributing its decision to stop offering labor and delivery services at the Council Bluffs hospital "would be inaccurate."



While the cost of health care continues to rise in America, many hospitals are working to find ways to remain open or maintain their staffing.


Andy House, CHI Health's director of communications of the Midwest Division, told The Nonpareil in a phone call Thursday after the the story was initially published that "there is no risk for Mercy Council Bluffs closing."
The statement added: "Mercy Council Bluffs remains an important part of CHI Health, and we remain committed to serving the Council Bluffs community."

CHI Health's Omaha metropolitan area birth centers deliver more than 4,460 babies each year, Nielsen said, which incudes births in Council Bluffs. The health system's Omaha birth centers are located just 15 minutes away.


In April, an event hosted by the Council Bluffs Area Chamber of Commerce offered insight into the healthcare system and some of the challenges Council Bluffs’ hospitals face.



The chief executive officers of Methodist Jennie Edmundson and CHI Mercy Health hospitals spoke at a Council Bluffs Area Chamber of Commerce forum Friday morning.


The event featured David Burd and Kristin Blum, the CEOs of Methodist Jennie Edmundson Hospital and CHI Mercy Hospital respectively, as guest speakers.

Both stressed the importance of Council Bluffs’ growth to help the system maintain the current level of care.
“There will be a time, I'm the most positive, where it will be hard to argue for, and for us to get capital, to continue doing projects, to continue making our facilities better, if our community doesn't grow along with us,” Burd said in April.
"Over the last 20 years in Iowa, there has been a major decline in the number of hospitals that provide labor and delivery services, most often in rural areas," Cass Health in Atlantic said in a 2023 statement.


Outside of Council Bluffs, labor and delivery is offered at Southwest Iowa hospitals in Atlantic, Harlan and Shenandoah.
Rural patients, especially those with higher risk pregnancies who were already commuting to a larger regional center such as CHI Health Mercy, will likely need to add more time to their commute in Omaha — though many may be traveling to there for maternity care now as well.


Methodist Jennie Edmundson Hospital could also see a uptick in need for maternity care.

this is only one example of problems in "healthcareville". There have been almost 200 hospitals that closed since 2010..a lot of these service Medicaid and Medicare patients and government reimbursement rates don't provide the revenue to either keep hospitals open or keep all services ongoing. I doubt if things will get much better in the near future
 
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AFM22

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this is only one example of problems in "healthcareville". There have been almost 200 hospitals that closed since 2010..a lot of these service Medicaid and Medicare patients and government reimbursement rates don't provide the revenue to either keep hospitals open or keep all services ongoing. I doubt if things will get much better in the near future
If it's any consolation, this is in a million person metro with other materinity floors available and not a floor that is the only provider for several rural communities.

But yes, that is becoming an issue.
 
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