Valley City hospital OB ward closes

 
LOADING
Jan 04, 2009 - 04:05:24 CST
VALLEY CITY (AP) - The last scheduled baby to be born at Mercy Hospital in Valley City arrived Dec. 28 at 8:27 a.m.

Heather and Kevin Schudar of Cooperstown welcomed Hayden Thomas into the world last Sunday. The hospital obstetrics ward shuttered four days later.

Dr. Bradley Braunagel, a family medicine practitioner who delivered the baby, said the closing of Mercy Hospital's obstetrics ward leaves him worried about the effects distance and severe weather may have for expectant mothers in the area.

"I'm sad, very sad and disappointed that things didn't work out to where we could make things work," Braunagel said.

Braunagel said expectant mothers will still be able to get prenatal care at Mercy Hospital. But they will have to be referred to a doctor in Fargo or Jamestown for the final three to four appointments and delivery.

The North Dakota Healthcare Association said last fall that 10 of North Dakota's 43 licensed community hospitals deliver babies. Officials say the number has dropped because of a decline in births, and because services have become more complex.

Mayor Mary Lee Nielson and other city officials had tried to persuade Mercy officials to change their minds and keep the birth unit open. But Mercy officials said that would threaten the hospital's overall future.

Keeping the OB department would mean a risk of "losing the whole thing," former interim John Osse said earlier.

Osse said last fall that the number of deliveries at Mercy had dropped from about 100 to 68 in the past 10 years. In 2007 alone, he said, the OB department cost the hospital $320,000, at a time when it also struggled to find nurses.
   Printer friendly version
Valley City hospital OB ward closes
Comments

Robert L. McDonald wrote on Apr 13, 2009 8:54 PM:

" I remember being told for many years that a tornado was spotted above while I was being delivered at Mercy Hospital in Valley City. I was born on July 16, 1957. I had hoped to return to Valley City and visit the hospital and other sites from so long ago. I didn't stay long as my family moved west to the State of Washington soon after my birth. I now live in Shelton, Washington, just about 20 miles from the state capitol of Olympia. Now that both of my parents are gone, the trip to my birthtown means more. I hope the hospital will remain. I heard the wing I was born in, is long gone though. Time marches on and a return would be heartwarming. I will look up relatives. I shall return. Thank you for the stories. "

Post Your Own Comment
(optional)
   
All online comments are limited to 350 words total.
Comments are reviewed for taste, tone and language before posting.
Some comments may be used in the Tribune's print edition.
We value and respect your privacy, but The Bismarck Tribune might
disclose certain information to governmental entities if served with subpoena.

Copyright © 2009 Bismarck Tribune, a division of Lee Enterprises.  -PRIVACY POLICY