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Dr. Amara Balakrishnan, a pediatrician who has practiced in East San Jose for nearly a quarter-century, has watched the changes at Regional Medical Center with rising dismay. In two years, the number of babies delivered at Regional has dropped by more than a third. The number of beds available for sick children has fallen 55 percent. So doctors are forced to send them to hospitals across town -- burdening families who may speak no English, have no car and face multiple bus rides to get there.
Balakrishnan is among a group of doctors who are charging Regional and its parent, the for-profit health care conglomerate HCA, with turning their backs on the low-income patients who live near its East Side campus. Regional officials call the charges ``more emotional than real,'' and say the real problem is that the government doesn't fully cover the cost of treating the poor.
The doctors plan to air their concerns today at a meeting of Santa Clara County's Health and Hospital Committee. "Sick children have no place to go that is near their family," said Balakrishnan, who is chief of women's and children's services at Regional. She said she's heard similar complaints from dozens of area doctors: "It's almost like saying, "Don't come here."
Regional Medical Center, formerly the non-profit Alexian Brothers hospital, was purchased by HCA in 1999. In 2004, HCA abruptly closed Regional's downtown sister hospital, San Jose Medical Center, in a cost-cutting move.
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Whose family owns HCA? Hint---> <>
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