Press Release
Hospital Affiliation Approved
By Paul Leighton
Staff writer, SalemNews.com, Salem, MA
The state yesterday officially approved
the affiliation of Lahey Clinic and Northeast Health System,
creating a $1.3 billion organization that will provide medical care
throughout Essex and Middlesex counties and into southern New
Hampshire.
The affiliation will become effective May 1 under
the new name of Lahey Health System. It will include Lahey Hospital
in Burlington, Beverly Hospital, Addison Gilbert Hospital in
Gloucester, Lahey Clinic North in Peabody and BayRidge psychiatric
hospital in Lynn.
Dr. Howard Grant, the Lahey chief executive who
will lead the new organization, said yesterday that the move will
strengthen both organizations and hopefully allow them to expand
services.
"Our expectation is that we're going to grow as a
result of our organizations coming together," he said.
The affiliation was unanimously approved by the
state's public health council, a 15-member panel chaired by
Massachusetts Department of Public Health Commissioner John
Auerbach.
North Shore Elder Services Executive Director Paul
Lanzikos, a Beverly resident who serves on the council, said the
move gives North Shore residents a choice between two of the
country's leading health care providers, Lahey and Partners Health
Care, which includes Salem Hospital and Mass General/North Shore
Center for Outpatient Care in Danvers."I don't know of another
geographical area, never mind in Massachusetts but probably in the
United States, that has the opportunity to choose from one of two
world-class systems," Lanzikos said."You've got Partners, and
you've got Lahey. You go around the country, and both of these
names are highly regarded, and that's what we've got to pick from.
And the fact that they're competing together will hopefully keep
costs down."
The affiliation - hospital officials say it's
technically not a "merger" or "acquisition" because no money
exchanged hands - was generally received well at public hearings
held in Beverly and Burlington in January. The largest objection
came from residents of Cape Ann who are concerned about the future
of Addison Gilbert Hospital. Hospital officials had agreed to
guarantee Addison Gilbert's future for at least three years, but
Cape Ann residents wanted a stronger commitment. Lanzikos said the
council could not ask for a guarantee in "perpetuity" but did
impose a condition that requires Lahey to assess Cape Ann's health
care needs and report back to the council before any decisions are
made at the end of the three-year period.
The council does not have the authority to require
Lahey to keep Addison Gilbert open, Lanzikos said."But clearly,
it's a high-level public forum from which they would have to make a
good case, otherwise they would bear the risk of having negative
reactions that would not be favorable to their interests in the
long run," he said. "If they came back to us with a set of
recommendations that weren't supported by the evidence or seemed to
be shortsighted, the council would express a negative opinion."
Lanzikos added that he did not expect that to
happen. He said Grant and Kenneth Hanover, the Northeast Hospital
chief executive, are committed to making sure that health care is
available to everyone in the region and continues to improve.
"They're not going through all this to weaken this system,"
Lanzikos said.
Grant said the new Lahey system is committed to
allowing patients to receive care "as close to home as possible,"
meaning Lahey patients will be able to use Beverly Hospital and
vice versa. "If possible, we're going to try to identify ways to
provide more services at Addison Gilbert, but we're going to need
to make sure the physicians and the residents are going to be eager
and able to support the services we would bring to that community,"
Grant said.
Grant said Lahey, with its history of providing
tertiary care for more complicated medical problems, and Northeast,
as a "superbly run" community hospital, will be able to provide a
full spectrum of care for patients. "Our two organizations fit
together magnificently," he said.
Grant said that although Lahey was larger, the two
organizations will govern equally under the new setup, with equal
representation on the board of directors. He said that philosophy
is attractive to other institutions that have already inquired
about affiliating with Lahey Health Care.
Lahey Hospital, Beverly Hospital and Addison
Gilbert Hospital will remain independently licensed, he said. "The
day-to-day operations don't change, but there will be great ways to
figure how to develop new programs," Grant said.
Asked if there will be layoffs, Hanover said,
"There likely will be some displacement of employees at some point
in our process, but there are no plans to eliminate positions on
day one at all." Grant said he's hoping the organization will grow
to the point where it will hire more people "because more patients
in our area will be coming to us for care." Hanover said the
organization has undertaken a branding study to consider the best
way to promote the new organization. The signs on buildings will
not immediately change when the affiliation takes effect May 1.
Hanover said hospital officials received verbal
approval for the affiliation from the attorney general's office on
Monday and need no other regulatory approvals.
"We're delighted," Hanover said. "This has been a
long process. We think we have been thorough in the process, and to
have the regulators be as supportive as they have been is just
another validation that this is the right relationship for both
parties to have pursued."
Staff writer Paul Leighton can be reached
at 978-338-2675 or by email at pleighton@salemnews.com