NY hospital CEO comes back to Cuomo amid nursing home scandal spin

The CEO of five large hospitals in New York City came to the aid of Gov. Andrew Andrew by issuing a statement in support of a controversial directive to nursing homes to accept COUID-19 patients – after his push for industry .

A senior-care insider said on Friday that nursing homes had not been consulted before the March 25 mandate was issued and that it was clearly “from hospitals.”

“Who else but the hospitals?” The source said.

Jim Clyan, president of prominent age New York – which represents nursing homes and other residential facilities for seniors – also said “no one spoke to me” before the state health department issued the directive.

In a statement of more than 800 words, the hospital’s chief executive said the order issued since then was a “prudent and safe option” to free it from its facilities during the first wave of the epidemic.

“It is an everyday practice in hospitals to send stable, medically recovered patients to nursing homes as long as the nursing home can safely take care of the patient,” his statement said.

“This is also true for infectious patients who are medically stable, if appropriate precautions are taken.”

Officials who signed the statement include Mount Sinai Health System CEO Kenneth Davis, who revealed in The Post that the mandate was issued at the time – in a waterfront mansion near Palm Beach, Fla. – And when desperate nurses were wearing Mount Sinai West. To protect yourself from garbage infection.

In addition, Northwell Health CEO Michael Dowling – a former state official and longtime Cuomo consultant – was also New York-Presbyterian CEO Steven Corwin, NYU Langone Health CEO Robert Grossman, and Montefor CEO Philippe Ojua.

Medical personnel transported a dead patient to the Brooklyn Hospital Center on April 09, 2020 in a refrigerated truck serving as a temporary morgue.
Medical personnel transported a dead patient to the Brooklyn Hospital Center on April 09, 2020 in a refrigerated truck serving as a temporary morgue.
Via AFP Getty Image

The CEO’s retroactive prescription for the directive – which critics blame for spreading the infection among highly vulnerable seniors – was made in a press release late Wednesday, in a legislative hearing on Thursday over the grilling of Health Commissioner Howard Zucker ahead.

It appears that it is part of a two-pronged, public relations-relations blitz, which included a 1,700-plus-word statement and conference call with reporters by Cuomo colleague Steven Cohen that repeated the governor’s multiple talking points.

But the efforts did not vaccinate Zucker against the attacks of angry lawmakers, including state Sen. Tom Tom O’Mara (R-Elmira), who demanded to know who ordered Kovid-19 to be in a total nursing home. Deaths should be kept. public.

Zucker refused to answer that question, citing an “ongoing investigation” by federal authorities that was allegedly provoked by the post-revelation of the cover-up.

Assemblyman Ron Kim (D-Queens) – who has called for impeachment of Kyomo and demanded that he and the State Democratic Committee return $ 10 million in donations from the hospital industry – accusing the governor of “hiding his loyalists” Planted.

“The governor can’t get the public out of it,” Kim said.

“That is why we need an independent commission with a sub-power to examine the decisions of the Cuomo administration to be done in nursing homes.”

Assemblyman Ron Kim (D-Queens) says the government has regard to hiding nursing home death data
Assemblyman Ron Kim (D-Queens) says the government cannot “get the public away from it” with regard to hiding nursing home death data.
AP Photo / Seth Weinig

Assemblyman Tom Abinanti (D-Tarrytown) also said, “Clearly, there is an attempt to justify a poor decision after criticism from the Cuomo administration.”

Member of the Legislative Health Committee, Abinanti said, “The mere introduction of COVID patients violates the basic medical practice of keeping people safe.”

“It was not medical science to demonstrate that it would do no harm and after the fact, they are scrambling to justify a decision.”

Cuomo has not surfaced widely, sparking bipartisan outrage Wednesday over new sexual harassment allegations by former aide Lindsay Boylan, now the Democratic nominee for Manhattan Borough President.

The Greater New York Hospital Association – which represents more than 160 hospitals and the health system, including those whose CEO released Wednesday’s statement – said, “As widely reported, GNYHA COVID-19 seeks assistance from the state on the proper discharge of patients, who no longer require hospital care. “

“It was requested against the backdrop of the state directive that hospitals immediately and critically ill increase the capacity of the bed to make room for the anticipated surge of COVID-19 patients,” said GNYHA.

Northwell Health declined to comment, but neither Cuomo’s office nor Mount Sinai, New York-Presbyterian, NYU Langone nor Montefor immediately returned requests for comment.

The Health Department said, “There are politics and facts. This paper clearly outlines science-based findings from leadership in some of the world’s best health institutions who did everything to help lead this state in the darkest days of its epidemic. “

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