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The problems with our national health care system are becoming more apparent
as the number of uninsured citizens hits 47 million. Cuts in Medicaid, a
shortage of staffing in health care facilities, and consolidation have created
a health care crisis in the United
States which is painfully apparent now more
than ever in our own backyards.
According to a recent Star Ledger article,
at least 21 New Jersey
hospitals have been closed or consolidated over the past 15 years. This year we’ve already said goodbye to Union Hospital,
in Union Township
and Greenville Hospital
in Jersey City. Pascack
Valley Hospital
in Westwood is expected to close in November.
Last Year, we saw Irvington General close, and in 2004, the closure of Orange Memorial
Hospital and the
consolidation of two South Jersey Healthcare locations into one.
Healthcare in the state of New
Jersey, or lack there of, is deteriorating medical
accessibility, eliminating thousands of jobs, destroying educational
opportunities, and ultimately jacking up the cost of living. As hospitals
continue to close, hundreds of beds and thousands of jobs disappear. Patients
find that healthcare accessibility becomes an inconvenience when more common
health problems occur. However, the state of healthcare accessibility in the
State is dangerously deficient when one considers the very real possibilities of a natural disaster or epidemic.
When hospitals close, quality care begins to decline at remaining
facilities, as patients have nowhere else to turn and overcrowding occurs. This,
combined with limited staffing, puts hospitals at a greater risk for medical
errors occurring as well.
The lack of funding makes it difficult for hospitals to hire more staff
members and this is starting to show-up in the numbers. According to the New
Jersey Hospital Association, New
Jersey has lost 6,500 jobs in the past 10 years.
At this rate both the quality of life in New Jersey as well as the State’s economy
will suffer.
Just as a patient must reach out to a doctor, we must reach
out for a solution to the State’s healthcare problems. We can not allow New Jersey’s citizens to
live without accessibility to quality health care.
As your Assemblyman, I continue to work diligently on
creating, sponsoring and supporting legislation geared towards obtaining the
funding that will help protect and preserve not only what is left of New
Jersey’s healthcare facilities but also what is just beginning to evolve
through the positive fundamentals of healthcare and benefits.
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