Catholic Medical Center

Last updated
Catholic Medical Center
GraniteOne Health
Catholic Medical Center, Manchester NH.jpg
Catholic Medical Center
Catholic Medical Center
Geography
Location100 McGregor Street, Manchester, New Hampshire, United States
Coordinates 42°59′29″N71°28′31″W / 42.99139°N 71.47528°W / 42.99139; -71.47528
Organization
Funding Non-profit hospital
Services
Emergency department Level III trauma center
Beds330
Helipad (FAA LID: 18NH)
History
Opened1892
Links
Website http://www.catholicmedicalcenter.org
Lists Hospitals in New Hampshire

Catholic Medical Center (CMC) is a 330-licensed bed (with 258 beds staffed) not-for-profit full-service acute care hospital located in the West Side area of Manchester, New Hampshire, United States. CMC offers medical-surgical care with more than 26 subspecialties, inpatient and outpatient services, diagnostic imaging and a 30-bed 24-hour emergency department. Norris Cotton Cancer Center at CMC offers medical oncology and infusion services. In September 2022, the hospital was the subject of a highly damaging two-part exposé reported by The Boston Globe's Spotlight investigative journalism team surrounding the alleged coverup of frequent surgical malpractice by a former surgeon. [1] [2]

Contents

History

A large hospital in Manchester was first conceived by Mother Mary Gonzaga, one of the original Sisters of Mercy who arrived to the United States in 1858 from Dublin, Ireland. In 1892, she opened Sacred Heart Hospital, located in the center of the city. Two years later, she found a similar vision with Monsignor Peter Hevey, pastor of St. Mary’s Parish, and the Sisters of Charity of St. Hyacinthe. They collaborated to open Notre Dame Hospital on the west side of Manchester in 1894, at the site occupied by Catholic Medical Center today.

After decades of providing medical services separately, the two hospitals merged in 1974, forming Catholic Medical Center. With the dedication of a new building in 1978, the hospitals were able to combine resources and medical services, expanding care at the site of the prior Notre Dame Hospital.

Throughout the subsequent decades, CMC continued to grow into one of New Hampshire’s largest medical centers, with a dramatic expansion in cardiac care. This resulted in the formation of the New England Heart & Vascular Institute, a nationally-recognized leader in advanced cardiovascular services. [3]

In May 2002, CMC opened The Mom's Place maternity center. Approximately 1,200 mothers use The Mom's Place and CMC's Special Care Nursery to deliver their babies each year.

New England Heart & Vascular Institute

Catholic Medical Center is home to the nationally recognized New England Heart and Vascular Institue, which provides a full range of cardiac services and surgical procedures. [4] As one of the largest cardiac hospitals north of Boston, CMC has performed more than 70,000 invasive cardiac procedures, including an average of 400 open heart surgeries each year. The New England Heart Institute is home to the Cholesterol Management Center. NEHI also offers cardiovascular rehabilitation and wellness education to help patients recover in a multi-step program of exercise, education, risk factor management and development of a healthy lifestyle. The New England Heart Institute consists of 32 board certified cardiologists, CT surgeons and mid-level providers who diagnose and treat cardiovascular disease.

Rankings & recognitions

Catholic Medical Center is ranked second in the state of New Hampshire by U.S. News Health behind Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, and first in Southern New Hampshire. In 2023, it was rated "high performing" in seven procedures and conditions, including four of six rated procedures within cardiology and cardiac surgery. [5]

Controversies

In September 2022, Catholic Medical Center was the subject of a two-part exposé by the Boston Globe investigative journalism team. As reported in the article, a CMC cardiac surgeon had compiled one of the worst surgical malpractice records in the United States; over the past twenty years, no physician in the country had settled more lawsuits involving the surgical death of a patient. [1] The article outlines the extensive efforts of the CMC professional staff to prevent the surgeon from continuing to operate, and the alleged efforts of the CMC administration to suppress dissent and conceal poor outcomes in the interest of allowing the surgeon’s profitable activities to continue. This included demoting the hospital’s chief medical officer for his “attitude” after he recommended a third-party investigation, threatening the chair of the hospital’s peer-review committee with dismissal after he gathered technical information related to one of the surgeon’s alleged mistakes, and keeping patients on life support beyond all hope of recovery to protect the surgeon’s official mortality statistics. In support of their conclusions, The Globe quoted 17 current or former CMC employees on the record, including 11 physicians. [1] [2]

Earlier that same year, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of New Hampshire announced that Catholic Medical Center had agreed to pay $3.8 million "to resolve allegations" that it had participated in an illegal "kickback" scheme. [6] According to the government's assertions, CMC had systematically compensated a local physician for directing patients to CMC for cardiac procedures. The allegations were investigated as the result of a whistle-blower lawsuit filed by a former vice president of the CMC medical staff. [1] [6]

As of September 2022, CMC officials have denied any wrongdoing.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cardiac surgery</span> Type of surgery performed on the heart

Cardiac surgery, or cardiovascular surgery, is surgery on the heart or great vessels performed by cardiac surgeons. It is often used to treat complications of ischemic heart disease ; to correct congenital heart disease; or to treat valvular heart disease from various causes, including endocarditis, rheumatic heart disease, and atherosclerosis. It also includes heart transplantation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">University of Ottawa Heart Institute</span> Hospital in Ottawa, Ontario

The University of Ottawa Heart Institute (UOHI) (French: Institut de cardiologie de l'Université d'Ottawa ) is Canada's largest cardiovascular health centre. It is located in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It began as a department in The Ottawa Hospital, and since has evolved into Canada's only complete cardiac centre, encompassing prevention, diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation, research, and education.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Boston Children's Hospital</span> Hospital in Massachusetts, U.S.

Mercy General Hospital is a not-for-profit private community hospital located in the East Sacramento neighborhood of Sacramento, CA. The hospital has 342 beds and over 2,000 clinical staff, and serves as the major Cardiac Surgery referral center for the Greater Sacramento Service Area Dignity Hospitals, as well as for Kaiser Permanente. The Mercy Heart Institute and the Mercy Stroke Center are key features of the hospital. It is a member of the Dignity Health network.

St. Cloud Hospital is a hospital in St. Cloud, Minnesota, United States. It is a Catholic-affiliated, not-for-profit institution and part of CentraCare Health. The hospital has more than 9,000 employees, 400 physicians and 1,200 volunteers. It serves 690,000 people in a 12-county area.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Redmond Burke</span> American surgeon

Redmond P. Burke is an American congenital heart surgeon, innovator, software developer, author, inventor, and founder of The Congenital Heart Institute at Miami Children's Hospital in Miami, Florida. He starred in the ABC pilot television show The Miracle Workers. Burke has been recognized as one of the world's most innovative surgeons, and for his use of information technology to improve surgical outcomes.

Cardiothoracic anesthesiology is a subspeciality of the medical practice of anesthesiology, devoted to the preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative care of adult and pediatric patients undergoing cardiothoracic surgery and related invasive procedures.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">MelroseWakefield Hospital</span> Hospital in Massachusetts, United States

MelroseWakefield Hospital is a 174-bed non-profit hospital located in Melrose, Massachusetts. MelroseWakefield Hospital is affiliated with Lawrence Memorial Hospital of Medford. MelroseWakefield Hospital provides many different areas of patient care including surgery, cardiology, maternity, orthopedics, endoscopy, and emergency services.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saint Thomas - Midtown Hospital</span> Hospital in Tennessee, U.s.

Ascension Saint Thomas Hospital Midtown, formerly known as Baptist Hospital, is a non-profit community hospital in Nashville, Tennessee, United States and the largest such hospital in Middle Tennessee. It is licensed for 683 acute and rehab care beds.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">McLaren Flint</span> Hospital in Michigan, United States

McLaren Flint is a nonprofit, 378 bed tertiary teaching hospital located in Flint, Michigan. McLaren is affiliated with the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine's medical residency programs, including family medicine, internal medicine, general surgery, orthopedic surgery and radiology. McLaren also maintains a hematology/oncology fellowship program in partnership with Michigan State University and is sponsoring a surgical oncology fellowship program. McLaren Flint is a subsidiary of McLaren Health Care Corporation.

Shasta Regional Medical Center, formerly known as Redding Medical Center and Memorial Hospital, is a general acute care hospital that is located in Redding, California. It opened in 1945 and currently has 226 beds with a basic emergency department.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lawrence H. Cohn</span> American-born pioneering cardiac surgeon, researcher, and medical educator

Lawrence H. Cohn, was an American-born pioneering cardiac surgeon, researcher, and medical educator. He had been on the surgical staff at Harvard Medical School since 1971 and had been a Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School since 1980. In 2000, he was awarded the first endowed Chair in Cardiac Surgery at Harvard Medical School.

St. Francis Hospital is a general medical and surgical hospital located in Columbus, Georgia, United States, and is accredited by the Joint Commission.

The German Hospital Tirana is a hospital in Tirana, Albania.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Adventist HealthCare White Oak Medical Center</span> Hospital in Maryland, United States

Adventist HealthCare White Oak Medical Center is a hospital with 180 private patient rooms and serves patients in Montgomery, Prince George's, and surrounding counties.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steward Health Care System</span>

Steward Health Care is the largest physician-owned private for-profit health care network in the United States and attends to 2.2 million people during more than twelve million physician and hospital visits annually. Headquartered in Dallas, Steward's integrated health care model employs 40,000 people at thirty-three hospitals and hundreds of urgent care, skilled nursing, and primary and specialty care medical practice locations across eight states. Steward Health Care is led by CEO Ralph de la Torre, a Cuban-American physician, engineer and cardiac surgeon.

Richard Lee is a cardiac surgeon in St. Louis, Missouri, who helped pioneer a staged Hybrid Maze, a procedure for atrial fibrillation or AFIB. combining surgery and catheter based approaches.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manchester VA Medical Center</span> Hospital in New Hampshire, United States

The Manchester VA Medical Center is a medical facility for US military veterans located in Manchester, New Hampshire. It is part of the VA New England Healthcare System, and operates under the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide healthcare to veterans who are residents of New Hampshire. Built in 1950, it is the only Veteran's Affairs medical facility in the state, but is no longer a full-service hospital.

National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases (NICVD); (Urdu: نيشنل انسٹيٹيوٹ آف كارڈيو ويسكيولر ڈيزيزز) in collaboration with the Government of Sindh are a chain of health care centers located in Sindh, Pakistan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">George E. Green (doctor)</span> American cardiac surgeon (born 1932)

George E. Green is an American cardiac surgeon best known for pioneering and implementing the first surgical procedure of the left coronary artery bypass graft using the internal thoracic artery sutured to the left anterior descending coronary artery to bypass obstruction to the heart circulation in the late 1960s. He applied these techniques in 1968 at New York University Medical Center and in 1970 he was hired to establish St. Luke's Hospital's cardiac surgery program in Manhattan, New York, that by 1982 was seeing approximately 1,800 cases a year, the biggest program in the state. Green has lectured internationally on the topic and has written numerous reports on internal thoracic artery grafting as well as co-authoring, Surgical Revascularization of the Heart: The Internal Thoracic Arteries.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Ostriker, Rebecca; Fernandes, Deirdre; Kowalczyk, Liz; Saltzman, Jonathan; Wen, Patricia (7 September 2022). "A celebrated surgeon, a trail of secrets and death". BostonGlobe.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2022. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  2. 1 2 Fernandes, Deirdre; Kowalcyzk, Liz; Ostriker, Rebecca; Saltzman, Jonathan; Saltzman, Jonathan; Wen, Patricia (8 September 2022). "A crisis of conscience, with lives on the line". BostonGlobe.com. Archived from the original on 13 September 2022. Retrieved 2022-09-13.
  3. "History & Mission" . Retrieved August 7, 2023.
  4. "Heart Healthy: New approach at CMC compiles resources for patients with heart failure | New Hampshire". UnionLeader.com. Retrieved 2017-08-23.
  5. "Catholic Medical Center". health.usnews.com.
  6. 1 2 "Catholic Medical Center Agrees to Pay $3.8 Million to Resolve Kickback-Related False Claims Act Allegations". www.justice.gov. 2022-02-09. Retrieved 2022-09-14.