
Dr. Aaron Lord, chief of neurology at °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn, leads one of the top neurocritical care teams in Brooklyn. His patient, Angelica Gomez, is being treated for an autoimmune condition similar to multiple sclerosis that inflames the spinal cord.
Photo: Joshua Bright
One evening last summer, a man in his late 50s walked into an emergency department in New Jersey feeling so sick he worried he might never walk out. He was eventually diagnosed with kidney failure and placed on dialysis to remove a buildup of toxins in his blood. Once his condition had stabilized, he was discharged and told to find a dialysis center since his condition would require weekly treatments. For the patient, who had neither health insurance nor a home, the exit plan felt more like an eviction notice.
Confused and worried, he found his way to a church-run shelter in the Sunset Park section of Brooklyn and hoped for the best. It was his good fortune that the best happened to be right around the corner. The shelter referred him to a nearby medical center, °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn. In recent years, the hospital has quietly set a new bar for medical care in Brooklyn, a borough in which many medical centers have historically ranked among the worst in the nation. °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn has set in motion a high-reaching plan to change that frustrating narrative.
âThe pledge has always been to bring the same high level of care to southwest Brooklyn that patients receive at °”ÍűTV Langone Healthâs top-ranked hospital facilities in Manhattan,â says Bret J. Rudy, MD, senior vice president and chief of hospital operations, °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn, who assumed the leadership role when Lutheran Medical Center merged with °”ÍűTV Langone Health in 2016. âThe goal is one standard of care for all patients, no matter where they live.â
By all measures, °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn is succeedingâand in dramatic fashion. Since the merger, °”ÍűTV Langone has invested millions in its Brooklyn hospital, directing a significant percentage of those funds to human capital. Full-time faculty have replaced a predominantly voluntary physician workforce. Board-certified critical-care specialists now cover all of its intensive care units 24/7. A fully reimagined hospitalist program ensures that every medical unit in the 450-bed hospital is covered around the clock by one of 21 hospitalists, attending physicians who are dedicated solely to caring for hospitalized patients. âItâs about providing the right care for the right patient at the right time,â says Dr. Rudy.
°”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklynâs Remarkable Turnaround
°”ÍűTV Langone Health tracks over 800 quality and safety metrics as part of a continual effort to evaluate and improve its performance, and the numbers emerging from °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn tell a remarkable story. Today, the hospital maintains one of the lowest mortality rates not just in Brooklynâbut in the nation. Its rates of hospital-acquired infections have plummeted 60 percent in the past 3 years, making it one of the safest hospitals in New York City. Patients in its emergency department now receive care twice as quickly as they do at other Brooklyn hospitals. Inpatients not only go home faster than they do at nearly every other hospital in New York City, but they are also less likely to wind up back in the hospital within 30 daysâa critical window of time for recovery.
The turnaround is all the more striking considering that °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn serves a community with more residents on Medicaid than any other in the U.S. Compounding this is a significant percentage of uninsured patients, a population that tends to be sicker than the privately insured due to its limited access to healthcare. To better meet the needs of this community, °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn provided nearly $150 million in charity care last year, a record high for the hospital.
Greater Access to High-Quality Care for an Underserved Community
For the homeless patient with kidney failure, stabilizing his condition required relatively straightforward clinical care. The bigger challenge was drawing up a comprehensive plan to give him the best possible chance of staying healthy once he left the hospital. âIf we just sent him away after his condition had stabilized, he would have been back in the emergency department, or worse, he would have died,â says Frank M. Volpicelli, MD, chief of medicine at °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn. The patientâs multidisciplinary teamâincluding his doctors, care manager, and social workerâspent days navigating the gauntlet of paperwork required to enroll him in a New York State Medicaid plan that would ensure his access to an outpatient dialysis center. âAn interdisciplinary care team stepped in and said, âOK, what resources do we need to marshal to make sure we can discharge this patient safely?ââ adds Dr. Volpicelli.
The same rigorous approach is transforming care for patients whose cases are not so straightforward. âIn the past, some patients would have to be transferred to another hospital,â says Joseph M. Weisstuch, MD, chief medical officer at °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn. âNow, we have the expertise to treat more complex illnesses. Weâre not just a feeder for our hospitals in Manhattan.â
The investment has made all the difference for patient Louis Battaglia. When the 58-year-old appliance salesman from Dyker Heights in southwest Brooklyn was diagnosed with a rare form of malignant stomach cancer in 2018, he figured his treatment would require rounds of debilitating chemotherapy and radiation treatments, along with frequent trips to Manhattan. But Camilo Correa, MD, a surgical oncologist who joined °”ÍűTV Langone HospitalâBrooklyn two years ago from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, was able to remove the cancerous tissue in a single operation. His approachâinvolving minimally invasive surgical techniquesâallowed Battaglia to walk out of the hospital cancer free the next day and eliminated the need for chemotherapy or radiation.
âAccess to care is not the same thing as access to high-quality care,â says Dr. Rudy. âItâs our mission and our duty to redefine what healthcare means for the people of Brooklyn.â