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July 18, 2008
Gov. gives smaller hospitals OK for heart procedures
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Gov. Joe Manchin has cleared the way -- with one exception -- for medium-size hospitals to offer life-saving heart procedures without on-site cardiac surgery units.

The regulations -- approved by the state Health Care Authority last month and signed by the governor this morning -- allow cardiologists at community hospitals to perform angioplasties and other procedures to unclog blocked and narrowed arteries to the heart.

At least seven West Virginia hospitals are expected to seek approval to begin performing life-saving cardiac catheterization procedures.

"Most importantly, this will save lives," said Dan Lauffer, chief executive officer of Saint Francis Hospital, which has been offering cardiac catheterizations as part of a state demonstration project the past four years. "Obviously, angioplasties can be done safely in smaller institutions if quality is the focus."

The governor's approval came with one exception. He wants the Health Care Authority to revise a section of the new standards that regulates elective angioplasties.

The new rules stipulate that the Health Care Authority would give special consideration to hospitals more than an hour apart -- by medical transport time -- that want to offer elective heart catheterizations.

That would seemingly hurt the chances of a hospital, such as Raleigh General in Beckley, of receiving the state's OK because the facility is within an hour's drive of Charleston Area Medical Center.

CAMC and other large hospitals opposed the Health Care Authority's changes, saying the standards would put patients in danger and drive up health care costs. Only six hospitals in the state, including CAMC, offer open-heart surgery.

Executives at the larger hospitals alleged that the community hospitals wouldn't have enough patients to maintain high-quality programs.

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