Sunday, July 31, 2022

Politicization reaches the Hospital Board Race

Note; Tom Walker, longtime Sarasota advocate for clean waters and Manasota 88, shared this piece from the Washington Post.

Information from the Washington Post yesterday about our local Sarasota hospital board races. At the end I've appended my original email with recommendations. Apologies to those of you who live outside Sarasota County, but this is a nationwide phenomenon that deserves attention.   


Sarasota Memorial Hospital (SMH)

Conservatives skeptical of coronavirus vaccines battle to lead a hospital

The battle for control of one of Florida’s largest public health systems has turned political

Tim Craig July 30, 2022

SARASOTA, Fla — When his blood oxygen dropped to what he described as a critically low level in September, Victor Rohe knew he had “a bad case of covid.”

But like growing numbers of conservatives here in southwest Florida, Rohe didn’t trust the doctors at Sarasota Memorial Hospital to treat him, even though it’s part of one of the state’s largest and highest ranked medical systems.

Rohe, a longtime Republican activist and self-described strict “constitutionalist,” instead rented his own oxygen unit and hooked it up at home. For the next several days, Rohe battled his coronavirus infection in his living room, relying on medical advice from friends and family members.

“If I went to the hospital, I believed I would die,” said Rohe, pointing to online videos and conspiracy theories he watched raising questions about the care some coronavirus patients received at the hospital.

Now a year later, Rohe is part of a slate of four conservative candidates trying to take over control of the board that oversees Sarasota’s flagship public hospital, highlighting how once-obscure offices are emerging as a new front in the political and societal battles that have intensified across the country since the start of the pandemic in 2020.

Although the contenders are considered underdogs to win on Aug. 23, health policy experts say the campaign is a troubling sign of how ideological divisions are spilling into the world of medical care as fights over abortion, the coronavirus and vaccines increasingly fall across party lines — alarming doctors, hospital administrators and medical experts.

“All you need to do is look at how [school boards] have now become very political … and how boards of education have ignored the science of education,” said Michele Issel, a public health professor emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. “There’s this new disregard for the professional training that medical people have, and a disregard for the science of what is best for the population.”

The Sarasota candidates, at least three of whom are skeptical of coronavirus vaccine mandates, are rallying behind the theme of “medical freedom.” The term is increasingly being utilized by the conservative movement nationwide and hits a belief that patients aren’t given enough control over their medical care. Proponents point to vaccine mandates and difficulty accessing unproven coronavirus treatments like Ivermectin that were touted by politicians but rejected by physicians.

“All 4 of us are devoted Christians, conservatives and patriots who deserve to make the [Sarasota Memorial Hospital] system stronger, more accountable with greater transparency,” one of the candidates, Joseph S. Chirillo, a retired physician, wrote in a social media post.

Several Florida-based conservative or far-right organization are supporting Rohe and his running mates in their bid to join the nine-member Sarasota hospital board.

Tamra Farah, senior director of MomForce, the education-focused branch of Moms for America, a group pushing for conservative women to become more engaged in the political process, said campaigns for low-profile positions demonstrate those on the right have “woken up.” Issues involving medical care also increasingly galvanize conservatives to the polls, Farah said, amid their growing distrust of the health care establishment.

“No one should ever feel threatened by one group of doctors’ thoughts versus another group of doctors,” Farah said. “Everyone should have their debates. Everyone should have all the information available. And people should be able to decide for themselves.”

In Sarasota, the county hospital has long been a source of pride while also serving as a magnet drawing both retirees and doctors and nurses to the region. U.S. News and World Report recently named Sarasota Memorial Hospital as the sixth best hospital in Florida, and the top hospital in the broader Tampa Bay region.

Moderate and left-leaning residents now worry that the hospital’s prized reputation could be shattered if the current board is ousted in favor of more conservative candidates, who have largely still have not explained how they would wield their new powers.

“I am not sure what they are looking to prove, because we have a phenomenal hospital system,” said Teri A Hansen, president and CEO of the Charles & Margery Barancik Foundation, a Sarasota-based charity that oversees a $636 million endowment. “I would like to think that the people running just want to see it grow and be a winner, but I suspect that is not why they are running.”

As a taxpayer funded public hospital, Sarasota Memorial Hospital also operates as one of the region’s safety net hospitals. Nationwide, 951 of the nation’s 6,093 hospitals are affiliated with a state or local government, according to the American Hospital Association. In Florida, those public hospitals can either have elected or appointed boards of directors.

Sarasota’s elected board members — who represent districts but are elected by voters countywide — hold staggered four-year terms. Sarasota County Public Hospital Board members hire the CEO, provide strategic guidance, oversee the system’s $1.3 billion annual budget, and have the power to assess a property tax to raise money for hospital projects.

The current board members up for reelection this year, all of whom are also Republicans, appear stunned to now face a challenge from the more conservative wing of their party. Many have extensive backgrounds in medicine or business, and find themselves in the middle of a battle that could also help determine whether relatively moderate GOP candidates can continue to fend off more conservative factions.

Darryl W. Henry has served on the hospital board since 2008 and is facing a challenge from Patricia Maraia, a nurse running with the slate of conservative candidates.

Before retiring in Sarasota in 2006, Henry worked for the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon in Washington, serving as the director of the tech-focused Joint Warrior Interoperability Demonstration program. In the 1980s, Henry also served as chief engineer of the U.S. military’s “Milnet,” which he described as a forerunner of the internet.

In an interview, Henry said he is not sure why Maraia decided to challenge him, although he recalls how she would show up at board meetings as “controversial noise” during discussions about the hospital’s coronavirus and vaccination policies.

“The people running will probably regret if they won this position,” Henry said. “It is hard. It is time demanding and it requires deep intellectual thought and requires you gaining knowledge of the entire medical process, and entire medical financial process.”

Maraia did not return phone calls seeking comment. On her campaign website, Maraia describes herself as a “conservative who is committed to serving her community” by advocating for “patient’s rights” and the “rights of the medical profession to practice medicine with freedom.”

Another incumbent GOP board member, Joseph J. DeVirgilio, Jr., is president of a consulting company and a former utility executive who also previously served on a hospital board in Upstate New York. DeVirgilio is being challenged by Bridgette Fiorucci, a nurse at Sarasota Memorial Hospital who helped organize opposition to the hospital’s vaccine mandate policies, and one other GOP candidate.

Fiorucci did not respond to telephone and written requests for comment. In January, Fiorucci posted a photograph on Facebook of herself standing beside Robert Malone, a controversial activist who has spread discredited information about coronavirus vaccines.

“Over the last 3 years, we have seen our freedom slowly eroding,” Fiorucci wrote on her campaign website. “Decisions have been made in the medical profession that have ruled over a patients’ autonomy … I want to make sure you have ALL medical options available.”

DeVirgilio, however, said he believes Sarasota voters will continue to support him, noting his experience and the current board’s accomplishments, including overseeing the recent construction of a 100-bed hospital and opening a new cancer care center

“As an individual schooled in engineering,” DeVirgilio added, “I support the expansion of science-based health care initiatives for improved care for my Sarasota neighbors.”

Located about an hour south of Tampa, Sarasota County is home to about 450,000 residents who live among some of the nation’s top-ranked beaches and historic arts venues. Although the county has been a relative stronghold for Republicans for generations, voters here largely tended to align with the moderate, business-oriented wing of the party.

But over the past 2½ years, Sarasota has been an epicenter of some of Florida’s nastiest brawls over what policies should be implemented to keep residents safe during the pandemic.

Initially, the county school board voted to maintain a mask mandate for students, even though Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) and GOP legislators barred school districts from implementing one.

Floridians give DeSantis points for his covid stance. Will it hold?

The policy enraged some parents, leading to months of tense school board meetings. Meanwhile, the public feud over the pandemic increasingly centered around covid patient care at Sarasota Memorial Hospital, even though the facility has consistently earned A ratings for patient safety. Rohe said one incident in particular last summer spurred the conservative challengers’ bids for the board.

In August, Sarasota County resident Stephen Guffanti, a former emergency room physician and outspoken conservative activist, was admitted to Sarasota Memorial Hospital for coronavirus treatment. Guffanti, who was skeptical he really was infected with the virus, was placed in a hospital room with another coronavirus patient. Within days, Guffanti said in an interview, both he and his roommate develop pneumonia — a complication of the virus.

As his roommate’s condition deteriorated, Guffanti said he became worried the man was not receiving quality care and became his “patient advocate.” He said he notified nurses and the on-call doctor that his roommate was getting worse — and accused them of not taking his concerns seriously. After raising his concerns, Guffanti said he was separated from the man and placed in a room by himself. Later, he signed a document to get out of the hospital, even though it was against medical advice. The patient he’d expressed concern about died a few days later, he said.

Kim Savage, a hospital spokeswoman, declined to comment on Guffanti’s allegations, citing privacy laws. But Savage said hospital employees “worked with dedication and diligence throughout this pandemic.” She added “unsubstantiated, untrue and often politically motivated accusations” do “a grave disservice to patients, caregivers and the community.”

But after he was released from the hospital, Guffanti produced viral videos that documented his alleged experience in the hospital and claiming that the hospital had become “a jail” — fueling conspiracy theories that health institutions were trying to inflate coronavirus numbers. The videos quickly circulated among conservative and anti-vaccine groups, leading to demonstrations outside the hospital.

About a month ago, Guffanti decided to press his grievance with the hospital even further by recruiting the slate of candidates to run for the health system’s board, personally reaching out to Rohe, Fiorucci, Maraia and Chirillo to launch their campaigns under the banner of “medical freedom.”

“The biggest problem, and it’s not just here, it’s all around the country, is the interruption of the doctor-patient relationship,” said Rohe, adding Guffanti’s experience at the hospital is one reason he decided to self-treat his own coronavirus symptoms. “If you went to a hospital. Would you want your medical decisions made a bureaucratic? Or by your doctor? … The culture of the hospital has changed.”

‘All we think about is the patients’

Shortly after Rohe and his running mates announced their candidacy, a coalition of conservative political groups began rallying in support, often linking the slate with a simultaneous effort by the right to win a majority on the Sarasota County School board.

In addition to Sarasota Moms for America, the slate has been endorsed by Sarasota Watchdogs, a far-right group whose leaders have been involved in several testy political fights in the county. Rohe said the slate is also being supported activists affiliated with Defend Florida, a group pushing to rewrite state elections laws to limit mail-in ballots.

“Conservatives just want to live our lives, do our own thing, and just be left alone,” said Victor G. Mellor, a local business executive who is supporting the slate. “That didn’t happen [during covid] … so everyone now understands you have to start sacrificing, wake up and get involved.”

Dr. Matthew N. Goldenberg, an associate professor of psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine, said he’s not surprised the politicization of medicine is now presenting itself in highly localized elections.

“Partisanship is creeping more and more, and in fact sprinting, into all facets of society,” said Goldenberg, who studies political trends in health care. “And one of the things that people can do to hopefully protect themselves is just be aware of that phenomena.”

Issel, the University of North Carolina professor, said a conservative takeover Sarasota’s hospital board could have a variety of implications.

With the board having the authority to raise Sarasota County property taxes, Issel said new board members could use that to drain hospital revenue. If new board members tried to enact policies that limited the administration of vaccinations, for example, Issel said that could result in conflict with major insurance companies.

“Would they pick a new CEO that is aligned with their perspective?” Issel asked. “And how would the new policies of the CEO trickle down?”

Thomas R. Oliver, professor of Population Health Sciences at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, said he worries politicization of health care could eventually filter into the boards of larger, statewide hospital systems.

Some public hospital networks, such as the University of Wisconsin Hospitals and Clinics Authority, have boards of directors appointed by governors. And in recent months, some Republican officials have appointed vaccine skeptics to state health care boards or commissions.

“If you suddenly get new boards of government health care systems, you could really impact things significantly and cause a lot of reconsidering of what are our services? Who has a say?” Oliver said.

Dr. James Fiorica, the chief medical officer of the Sarasota Memorial Health Care System, said he doubts the makeup of the board would influence how medical care is offered. Instead, Fiorica said the bigger risk is that a new board could “slow down projects.”

“You certainly don’t want to rock the boat of a good system that is making good progress,” he said.

Social media posts made by one of the conservative candidates, Chirillo, provide some insight into his views. On Facebook, Chirillo, the retired doctor, has downplayed the ongoing spread of the monkeypox virus, mocked the effectiveness of vaccines, and questioned whether the term “assault weapon” should be used to describe such weapons.

Rohe, a former New York City police officer who also previously worked in the financial services industry, also expressed controversial views about the coronavirus vaccine.

“Calling it a vaccination is a joke,” Rohe said. “All it really is is a government-mandated shot to inoculate people to the fact that the government owns your body, and you do not.”

Still, Rohe stressed, if elected he and the rest of his slate will stay focused on bolstering oversight over hospital management, saying they are merely trying to create a hospital where residents feel comfortable talking to their doctors about a variety of treatment options when they need medical care.

“All we think about is the patients,” Rohe said.

=====

Note from Tom Walker:

Like me, many of you in Sarasota are starting to fill out your Vote by Mail ballots. I noticed that there were four races for the hospital board, all with unfamiliar names. So I asked some knowledgeable friends and came up with a recommendation for each of those races.

  • Hospital Board Central District Seat 2 -   Thomas Dart 
  • Hospital Board Northern District Seat 1 - Brad Baker
  • Hospital Board Southern District Seat 1 - Darryl Henry
  • Hospital Board Southern District Seat 2 - Gregory Carter

The above choices are incumbents and although republican will help the board continue to function in a non-political manner. I recommend not voting for any of those at this website: https://healthfreedomsrq.com

And of course please be sure to vote for these three for the school board:

  • School Board District 1 - Dawnyelle Singleton (and definitely not for "Moms for Liberty" Ziegler)
  • School Board District 4 - Lauren Kurnov
  • School Board District 5 - Nora Cietek 

If you've not yet received your ballot in the mail, you can see what your actual ballot will look like at https://www.sarasotavotes.gov/Election-Information/Sample-Ballots.

In Manatee County go to https://www.votemanatee.com/Election-Information/Sample-Ballots.

Much more information is at ballotpedia.org, vote411.org, and sarasotadems.org


5 comments:

  1. My wife was in Sarasota memorial hospital for 2wks
    I was charged for guest meals and I wasn't there only after 6pm and they refused to take it off the bill
    How many other people are they ripping off

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  2. Very disappointed that this blog would put such a shoddy article on its site.
    I do not have time to list all the inaccuracies, but I will touch on a few points.
    First, we all know that all levels of govt (federal, state and local) have been co-opted by - call it what you want - but I call it fascism/corporatism. To think the current hospital Board has not is just plain foolish. I have done no research , just this article, but seriously, I am to put my faith in a former utility executive/consultant and a director of the tech-focused Joint Warrior Interoperability Demonstration program for the Joint Chief of Staff? Seriously. But the two nurses are not qualified and will have a difficult time and REGRET it because they need to "gaining knowledge of the entire medical process, and entire medical financial process.” What am I missing?
    The whole account of Sarasota County resident Stephen Guffanti is totally false and misleading. I encourage everyone to find the videos of his interviews and you will see for yourself. In a nutshell, he checked into the hospital because he knew he had covid. He got to know his roommate who was 50 years old and a marathon runner, the doctor is 70. On the 10th day together in that room, he asked the guy why he wasn't getting better and he was. The guy had no idea and he then asked him if he wanted him to be his patient advocate. The guy said yes. They went over his test results with the nurse on duty, and Dr Guffanti noticed he had pneumonia and told the nurse to call the doctor and get an antibiotic. Nothing happened and the guy tanked at 3 in the morning. Long story short, they wanted to relocate the doctor to another room and he said no bother I will sign out against medical advice, get him the form. They then had security put him in four point restraints and an empty room for about 6 hours before releasing him. There is more to the story, but I kind of think that is what is motivating him to run for the Board. I wouldn't call him an activist, I would call him a victim of abuse. And I checked him out, licensed in 3 states and has a wonderful phonics program for learning disabled kids to learn to read. This character assassination by WaPo is disgraceful.

    Covid, the whole story, was politics - from start to finish. The medical system has been corporate. Be careful. All hospitals in all countries played along and doctors at hospitals mainly are no longer in private practice, so if they speak out, they get fired and blacklisted.

    The great Barrington Declaration came out in May 2020 by three very highly credentialed medical professionals against all the covid policies being implemented, tens of thousands signed. So to say that opposition to what went on is fringe is ridiculous.

    And finally, Rohe is correct, these shots are not "vaccines", they are gene therapy. The WHO and govt's recently had to CHANGE the definition in order to make them fit, but the virologists know they are gene therapy. many definitions have been changed to fit this covid narrative.

    Science is NEVER settled. Science is debate and transparency. Anyway telling you otherwise is blowing smoke up your ass. We used to believe in second opions when it came to medical decisions. What happened?

    BTW, all my relatives that are fully vaccinated including boostered have come down with covid. Me, the unvaccinated, exposed to them while contagious, well doing just fine. I must be a modern miracle.

    I wasn't even going to vote for the hospital board, but this post made me so mad that I will now vote for anyone running against the incumbents.

    (I probably just wasted 10 min writing this, as it will mostly be censored)

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    Replies
    1. Marilynne, your political comment is proof positive that the article was 100% accurate about the politicalization of the board.

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  3. Long before covid, my husband was in the hospital with a broken ankle and diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. He was also totally blind. One day I came into the room to find him soaking wet from the chest down, covered in urine. He said he had rung for help, but no one came. I went out and asked the nurse at the front desk for assistance. A half hour later, when no one had shown up, I went out in the hallway and yelled at the nurses at the front desk asking how long did my husband have to lie in his own piss before someone would come. It still took another 15 minutes for someone to show up and clean him up. The next day I came in, his hands were covered in feces, and it was all over his face. No one was really caring for him. Along with the plate and 8 screws that were put in his ankle, he also received an antibiotic resistant infection. For this we were charged $125,000. BTW, I cleared up the infection with essential oils in short order after he got home.

    After he was released and in rehab, we made a visit to a surgeon to investigate possible surgery for his tumor. When I asked the nurse in the office whether I should get a private nurse to care for him due to SMH's lack of attention to him, she recommended I stay in the room with him 24 hours/day and care for him myself. They would put a cot in the room for me. I wonder if I would have gotten a discount for that. Fortunately, we decided against the surgery.

    His next (and last) visit to the hospital was 2 1/2 years later to be evaluated for hospice care. It was a total nightmare. You never get to see your primary care physician. Instead there is a stranger/hospitalist you need to deal with. That person changes every three days, so you have to go over everything again with them and sometimes you don't even get to meet them. Because there was a conflict at that time at the hospital about doctors allowing their patients to have hospice care at the hospital, I wasn't allowed to do that with him and was told by the hospitalist from Intracoastal Medical Services that if I made that choice they would have to stop being our doctors. The SMH case manager threatened to have me investigated by DCF if I did not take my husband home, so I was forced to discharge him with no medical care. For this we were charged $45,000. After the primary care physician ordered hospice care from Tidewell, they never bothered to show up. When they finally did (2 days later), we got a doctor from Tidewell who did not believe in increasing a dying patient's pain meds even if they were still in pain. My husband writhed in pain for two days until we got a doctor who was willing to work with us.

    Medical care today is all about money and nothing about care. I worked at SMH in the 1970's. It wasn't quite this bad then, but when I had to have surgery, I went to another hospital. I have threatened to have tattooed on my chest a medic alert, "Do not take me to SMH or I will haunt you for all eternity." And rather than $45,000 for my last days of non-care at SMH, take me to the Ritz. I will get more attention, better food, and the bill will be cheaper.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I want to add one more thing to my comments. Today a newsletter put out by an attorney in northern Florida, Coffee and Covid, also reported on the WaPo story. It reminded me of another point in the Stephen Guffanti story - about our local press and how bought off they are.

    The original first interview Guffanti did is here and I believe it was right after he was released.
    https://rumble.com/vl2a0d-er-doctor-witness-at-sarasota-memorial-hospital.html

    Does the WaPo reporter accurately tell his story?

    Well there was another SMH story that week where a family was protesting the visitor rules and our local station, SNN, said they were going to report on that story.
    https://www.snntv.com/story/44514618/protest-against-smh-visitor-restrictions-planned-for-friday
    I was very interested to see that report as someone said the doctor was going to hold a press conference at that protest on what he witnessed. Did they cover the protest? Not on your life. Instead the news director went down there, sat across the street at a cafe, and listened to what the other patrons were saying! Then he produced an opinion piece to air
    https://www.snntv.com/clip/15245369/snn-news-director-craig-burdick-on-the-protest-against-smh-visitor-restrictions

    We all have our opinions about all topics and we are all entitled to our own views. But the censorship I have witnessed over the past few years under the false umbrella of "misinformation" is scaring the crap out of me. So think long and hard before you vote all the incumbents back in and believe they are more qualified than doctors and nurses.

    SMH is a good hospital but it is not infallible and all news should be reported objectively and independently and sadly we lost that important control in this nation so we are all now misinformed.

    I don't agree with taxpayer money going to corporations so I have been very much against our Economic Development Group as well as any private public partnership deal. So I am against rumble getting money, but I like rumble because they don't censor - at least not at this moment. Who has you tube censored as misinformation? Try the American Association of Physicians and Surgeons. An organization of board certified medical practitioners who has been around since 1948.
    https://aapsonline.org/youtube-censors-top-doctor/

    ReplyDelete