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W.Va. may get new 148-bed mental hospital
CHARLESTON -- A new 148-bed psychiatric hospital in Beckley is one of the options the state is exploring to ease overcrowding in its two acute care mental health facilities.
The options are included in a letter from the attorney general's office that was obtained Friday by The Associated Press. The letter, dated Aug. 27, was sent to David Sudbeck, the state ombudsman for behavioral health, who released a report in July detailing crowded conditions at Mildred Mitchell-Bateman Hospital in Huntington.
The letter says the state Department of Health and Human Resources "has made great strides" in trying to stay within the two hospitals' capacity of 240 beds, but that factors ranging from an aging population to a rise in substance abuse-related commitments have made it impossible in recent years to avoid some crowding.
One of the options is the possibility of a hospital in Beckley, for which the letter says Appalachian Regional Hospital is preparing a certificate of need application. A call to Appalachian Regional Healthcare, the hospital's parent company, was not immediately returned.
Other possibilities under discussion include using 30 beds at a Highland Hospital facility to be built in Charleston and using the recently closed Vocational Rehabilitation Center in Institute.
But one advocate said the focus on adding new beds to acute care hospitals is distracting from the larger question of long-term solutions.
"They're looking for a quick fix instead of looking at why we have the problem in the first place," said Clarice Hausch, director of West Virginia Advocates, which works on behalf of disabled residents. Hausch wants to see more resources devoted to outpatient care.
"I'm not hearing any conversation at all about what services people can get when they get out of the hospital," she said.
The state is reviewing a number of options, including those discussed in the letter, but has not committed to a single approach yet, DHHR spokesman John Law said.
In addition to the prospect of new beds, the letter also said DHHR wants to hire up to 70 permanent employees at Bateman hospital to cut down on the use of employees hired for 90-day stints.
The use of temporary employees has been criticized by members of the UE Local 170 Public Workers Union who work at Bateman. They've complained that temporary employees last long enough only to be properly trained before their contracts expire.
In his July report, Sudbeck called on the state to re-evaluate the use of temporary employees with a view to learning whether it was harming patient care.
Calls to Sudbeck were not immediately returned Friday.
The letter says Sudbeck's recommendation to look into a separate psychiatric facility for "forensic" patients -- those committed by the criminal justice system -- isn't necessary because the state is already trying to ease crowding.
"Temporary staffing must be used to insure patient safety and permanent staff engaged in direct care must be required to work overtime," the letter says.
"Beds must be found for patients even at the expense of temporary crowding and diminution of privacy. Bateman hospital has risen to this challenge."