An influential writer in the Green Mountain State who’s lived there since the 1940s is calling for the culling of its hospital network.
Writing in the online outlet VTDigger, Bill Schubart, a past chair of the Vermont Journalism Trust, suggests 14 hospitals are too many to sustain across the second least-populous state—especially in a post-COVID world.
“Providing affordable healthcare to all Vermonters going forward will necessitate redeployment of our existing healthcare institutions,” he writes. “This can be done fairly and in a cost-efficient manner—evenly distributed across population density. In this new healthcare environment, reducing inpatient beds doesn’t and shouldn’t mean any loss of emergency/urgent care capacity but will focus us on real ‘health care’ as opposed to ‘illness care.’”
The opinion piece has sparked a spirited combox discussion.
“OK, but now tell me which hospitals you suggest we close,” comments one reader. “It’s all very easy to say that Vermont needs to ‘right-size’ everything [and] quite another to be upfront about whose ox should be gored.”
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