Fletcher Allen Health Care

Fletcher Allen Health Care
Fletcher Allen Health Care
Geography
Location 111 Colchester Avenue, Burlington, Vermont, United States
Coordinates 44°28′47″N 73°11′39″W / 44.479794°N 73.194119°W / 44.479794; -73.194119Coordinates: 44°28′47″N 73°11′39″W / 44.479794°N 73.194119°W / 44.479794; -73.194119
Organization
Care system Private
Hospital type Teaching
Affiliated university University of Vermont
Services
Emergency department Level I trauma center
Helipad Yes (FAA LID: 67VT)
Beds 562
History
Founded 1879
Links
Website http://www.fahc.org
Lists Hospitals in Vermont

Fletcher Allen Health Care, together with its partners at the University of Vermont College of Medicine and the College of Nursing and Health Sciences, is Vermont's academic medical center.[1] Fletcher Allen target clientele are the one million people in Vermont and northern New York. It serves as a community hospital for approximately 150,000 residents in Chittenden and Grand Isle Counties.[clarification needed] There are more than 30 patient care sites and 100 outreach clinics, programs and services throughout the region. It employs 6,000 workers and is the largest private employer in the state.[2]

Contents

Services

The Vermont Children's Hospital is in the hospital.[3] This is the state's only children's hospital and is one of 39 National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer treatment centers in the country, the highest level attainable.[citation needed] The Vermont Children’s Hospital’s Level IV Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, offers one of the highest levels of intensive care for critically ill and premature infants.

The hospital's General Clinical Research Center at Fletcher Allen/University of Vermont is one of 78 in the country and the only one in northern New England. Resident researchers are pioneering treatments for heart disease, cancer, Parkinson’s disease, diabetes, and ALS.[citation needed]

The medical center has comprehensive surgical services (neurological, cardiac, pediatric) and imaging equipment. It has a Philips high-field Open MRI, a Philips 3T MRI, a General Electric Signa LX 1.5 tesla system, and a 64-slice CT scanner.

As the only Level I Trauma Center in Vermont, the hospital tries to offer the region advanced technology and techniques to care for the most seriously ill and injured pediatric and adult patients. The hospital was the first organization in the United States to be verified as a Level I Trauma Center for both children and adults.[citation needed]

Emergency services

55,000 people were treated in the emergency room in 2007. The department is designed to process up to 65,000/year. The average wait time was 49 minutes.[4]

Operations

The hospital had a budget of $790 million in 2008. It received 8.2% of this from the state of Vermont.[5]

History

Hospital merger

Fletcher Allen Health Care was formed in 1995 from the merger of three organizations:

  • Medical Center Hospital of Vermont
Founded in Burlington, 1879, Mary Fletcher Hospital was the first hospital in Vermont. It was renamed Medical Center Hospital of Vermont in 1967.
  • Fanny Allen Hospital
In 1894, the Sisters of St Joseph founded the Fanny Allen Hospital in Colchester, Vermont. They named their hospital after Fanny Allen (daughter of Ethan Allen), a nun who nursed wounded American soldiers in the War of 1812. This site, now referred to as the Fanny Allen Campus, has an ambulatory surgery center and rehabilitation unit.
  • University Health Center
In 1971, ten medical specialty practice groups joined to form the University Health Center in the site of the former Bishop DeGoesbriand Hospital (1924). Most of the ambulatory clinics moved from the UHC campus to the Ambulatory Care Center in 2005.

Post-merger history

In 2008, the University HealthSystem Consortium evaluated the hospital as 15th out of 88 academic medical centers. It stood 48 in 2005.[6]

The Renaissance Project Controversy

In 1999, responding to proposals from chief executive William C. Boettcher, the State Department of Banking, Insurance, Securities and Health Care Administration (BISHCA) approved a $118 million plan called the Renaissance Project for new construction at Fletcher Allen. In 2001, the commission approved an amended proposal (also known as a Certificate of Need or CON) for $173 million. This second proposal was later described as "fraudulent" by the United States Attorney for the district including Vermont. This description was based on the fact that at the time Fletcher Allen management was maintaining two separate project budgets in an attempt to keep a major portion of the costs from BISHCA (specifically the cost of the parking garage). The final version of the proposal, approved in 2003, was $364 million. In the end, eight Fletcher Allen trustees resigned; the chief executive (CEO), chief financial (CFO) and chief operating officers (COO) resigned; the law firm retained by the hospital (Downs Rachlin Martin) agreed to pay $2 million in restitution and Fletcher Allen was fined $1 million.

In August 2006 David Cox, former CFO, pleaded guilty to charges and admitted his role in the controversy.[7]

As of 2007, four former executives have been charged with crimes associated with the project. The former CEO, William Boettcher, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to two years on federal conspiracy charges. David Demers, a former senior vice president for planning, also pleaded guilty to felony conspiracy charges. Thad Krupka, the former COO, pleaded guilty in state court to three counts of misdemeanor false claims.[8][9]

References

  1. ^ Fletcher Allen Health Care
  2. ^ America's Career Infonet accessed March 21, 2010
  3. ^ Vermont Children's Hospital
  4. ^ Maclean, Dan (September 24, 2008). ER visits up, wait times down. Burlington Free Press. 
  5. ^ Remsen, Nancy and Hallenbeck, Terri (January 30, 2009). NONPROFIT:Bill seeks cuts in some group's executive pay. Burlington Free Press. 
  6. ^ Hospital ranks 15th in study. Burlington Free Press. October 9, 2008. 
  7. ^ Vermont Guardian
  8. ^ US Attorney - VT
  9. ^ [1] Fletcher Allen Archive, Burlington Free Press 1998-2005

External links


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