This is the latest news about the failure of a medical group in Ventura
County that has put many people out of work and thousands of others without
health providers.  

-----Original Message-----
From:   Richard Hare 
Sent:   Thursday, October 19, 2000 7:33 AM
To:     All Employees; City Council
Subject:        La Times Article on Family Heatlh Care


Thursday, October 19, 2000 
Most Family Health Care Patients Still in Dark 
Medical: After company's failure, some physicians change groups or plan new
clinics. But many patients don't know who their doctor will be. 
By MARGARET TALEV, PAUL ANDERSON <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ,
Special to The Times


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</editions/ventura/vcnews/20001019/p000099563_g2niaike.html> SIMI
VALLEY--Several thousand patients who were left without doctors after the
collapse of a local medical group got good news Wednesday, when another
physicians group said it would hire four Camarillo doctors who lost their
jobs as a result of the company's failure. 
Patients of the four physicians can remain with them under their existing
insurance plans. 
But it remained unclear whether the majority of 135,000 patients covered by
Simi Valley-based Family Health Care will be reassigned to other doctors or
be forced to switch insurance plans if they want to continue seeing their
longtime physicians. 
In an attempt to ease patients' fears, Family Health Care officials called a
news conference Wednesday in the wake of this week's collapse of the largest
medical group in Ventura County. The group, with an estimated $6 million in
debt, is expected to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy today. 
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</editions/ventura/vcnews/20001019/p000099563_g2niaike.html> Family Health
Care officials said that all 2,000 affected high-risk patients can continue
to receive care from their doctors. They noted that one obstetrician
delivered a patient's baby through caesarean section Wednesday morning
despite the fact that he may never be reimbursed. 
They advised any patients who need prescriptions refilled to call their
pharmacies, saying area pharmacies are in contact with the staff doctors who
lost their jobs. 
But that message wasn't reaching some patients fast enough. 
Just outside the news conference, 75-year-old Charles Wilkerson stood in
front of a closed doctor's office with his wife, Jessie, trying to find
someone to check the 72-year-old woman's cough and refill her prescription.
The couple hadn't been able to get answers over the phone. 
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</editions/ventura/vcnews/20001019/p000099563_g2ni6kke.html> As doctors left
the news conference, Wilkerson confronted them: "I'm here to find out what .
. . is going on. I'm concerned about my wife. She's coughing real bad."
Doctors ushered the couple downstairs to an office so another physician
could check on the woman. 
Al Siegel, who owns Tapo Pharmacy, said state law allows pharmacists to give
patients a temporary supply of medication in emergency situations. But
Siegel, whose business is in the same building that Family Health Care Group
had doctors' offices, said business was slow Wednesday. 
"We'll probably know more in the next week or so" about how the bankruptcy
will affect business, Siegel said. "It's like [an] earthquake. You make do
until everything's up and running. We'll get through this." 
* * *
At least 23 of the 45 staff doctors who lost their jobs plan to organize
into four separate clinics in Simi Valley, Family Health Care Medical
Director Dr. George Dichter said. The clinics, which could open as soon as
Monday, would focus on obstetrics, pediatrics, internal medicine and family
practice. 
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/editions/ventura/vcnews/20001019/p000099563_g2ni9vke.html
</editions/ventura/vcnews/20001019/p000099563_g2ni9vke.html> "We expect by
the beginning of next week we will be open again and seeing the patients we
always have," he said. Those doctors were responsible for the care of as
many as 35,000 patients. 
However, the new clinics want to be paid by insurers on a fee-for-service
basis, not a capped rate as had been the case with financially overburdened
Family Health Care. 
Dichter acknowledged that Blue Cross, Health Net and other insurance
providers affiliated with Family Health Care had not immediately agreed to
restructure their payment plans simply to keep patients and doctors
together. 
It also was unclear what would happen to the remaining 85,000 Family Health
Care patients who saw 850 area primary-care and specialty physicians
affiliated with the group on a contract basis. 
The state Department of Managed Health Care, which has come under fire from
local doctors for failing to create a smoother transition, was urging
insurers Wednesday to do whatever it takes to keep patients seeing their
regular doctors, at least in the short term, which the state defines as 90
days. 
"We are encouraging them to negotiate--at a minimum in the short term--for
continuity of care," said Joy Higa, assistant director for plan and provider
relations with the state agency. 
Meanwhile, Family Health Care officials said the state and various insurers
should share the blame for the collapse of the group. The sudden collapse of
the long-troubled organization came after a handful of insurers canceled
contracts on short notice or failed to make expected payments, meaning there
was no money to pay employees, Dichter said. 
* * *
But one area physician, who canceled his contract with the company after it
failed to pay him tens of thousands of dollars, said the blame lies squarely
on Family Health Care's management. 
"They've been playing a shell game with claims for months," said Alan Mintz,
a general and vascular surgeon based in Thousand Oaks. "These guys knew they
were going under. These people have been grossly irresponsible. They could
have made other plans for their patients." 
Many of the approximately 6,000 patients who saw Drs. Albert Reeves, Tara
Yawata, Kevin Nishimori and Marcel Goldberg in Camarillo will be able to
continue seeing them in their new affiliation with Buenaventura Medical
Group, said that organization's medical director, Dr. John Keats. The
doctors are expected to start work there next week, Keats said. 
About 200 of the Simi Unified School District's 2,400 employees were members
of the failed group, but school officials were satisfied that the health
insurance companies were moving quickly to cover those members without
doctors. 
"Health Net has been very cooperative and very good to work with so far,"
said Cary Dritz, assistant superintendent of personnel services for the
school district. Insurance company representatives were sending regular
updates to school officials, Dritz said. 
Hundreds of Ventura County employees also depended on the health group for
medical care, but they can take advantage of the county's public medical
services system if there is an emergency, Chief Administrative Officer Harry
Hufford said. "We can say with confidence that if someone has a serious
medical problem we can help them." 
Insurance plans using Family Health Care had already notified some patients
about the group's demise. Maxicare told patients in a letter that arrived
Wednesday that enrollees could use the letter as temporary ID for services
until they are assigned a new doctor in the next few days. 
"Please be assured that this provider change has no effect on your current
benefits or co-payments," said the letter from Terry Kalamaras, vice
president of service and operations. "Your Maxicare coverage and benefits
will remain exactly the same." 
Talev is a Times staff writer and Anderson is a correspondent. Times staff
writer Daryl Kelley also contributed to this report. 
Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times        

        


 

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