At the time, Temple declined NBC News’ request for an interview and a spokeswoman for the Level 2 trauma center said Bayonet Point was “appropriately staffed to ensure the safe care of our patients.” The spokeswoman also said, “We rely on feedback from our physicians, and when issues are validated we take necessary action.”
Jyric Sims, president since June 12 of HCA’s West Florida division, which oversees Bayonet Point, did not respond to a request for comment on Temple’s departure or on the continuing problems at the facility. A hospital spokeswoman said Temple “continues to be employed in an advisory capacity.” She declined to comment further or answer other questions about Bayonet Point.
Public records show that a few weeks after the NBC News report on Bayonet Point, Florida’s Agency for Health Care Administration identified deficiencies in the hospital’s quality of care. In an “unannounced complaint survey” completed March 7, agency officials determined that “the facility failed to provide supervisory oversight” to ensure the immediate availability of a registered nurse in five of its 10 nursing care units. The report also noted an unidentified staff member characterizing the facility’s night shift nurses as having poor supervision, yet “they keep adding things for the nurses to do.” Another staffer noted that “When the Agency for Health Care Administration is in the building, they find staff but when AHCA leaves it goes to being understaffed.”
Even worse was a March 28 AHCA complaint that determined Bayonet Point had failed to provide a safe discharge for a Spanish-speaking patient who was left unattended in the hospital lobby. The patient was later found disoriented and sitting at a local bus stop, where he had been for over 24 hours, the report said. The president of quality at Bayonet Point, the report stated, disclosed to AHCA that “the facility does not have a policy for nursing staff on discharging patients.”
Subsequent visits by the agency found the deficiencies corrected and no additional shortcomings.
After the February NBC News report, two Republican members of Congress from Florida, Sen. Marco Rubio and Rep. Gus Bilirakis, sent a letter to HCA Healthcare requesting information about conditions and safety at Bayonet Point. It could not be determined how HCA responded — Congress is on summer hiatus and the hospital’s spokeswoman declined to provide its response to NBC News.
Two physicians said conditions at Bayonet Point have not improved significantly in recent months. The air conditioning system broke down in April, according to the physicians, and high humidity levels contaminated the surgical instrument trays. The hospital had to send the instruments and trays out to other facilities for sterilization, closing the operating room for a week.
Cockroaches remain a problem in the operating room, the doctors said. One said a staffer had recently placed two insects in specimen jars, labeled them, and left them on the main desk in the operating room.
On July 26, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid updated its hospital comparison website; it assigned HCA’s Bayonet Point facility one star out of five overall, well below average. Bayonet Point’s previous rating was also one-star, which the hospital’s spokeswoman said in February was based on old data from 2017 to 2019. The hospital had improved its quality since then, the spokeswoman said, a contention that CMS’s new rating does not confirm. The hospital spokeswoman declined to comment about the new one-star rating.
At the time of the February NBC News report, Bayonet Point was rated ‘A’ for patient safety by Leapfrog Group, an organization that ranks hospitals and describes itself as a health care watchdog. In Nov. 2021, when the facility received that ranking from Leapfrog, former CEO Temple said the grade “validates our commitment to safety.”
Now, according to new ratings issued by Leapfrog in May, Bayonet Point no longer receives a grade. The facility declined to participate in the survey, the Leapfrog website said. In the past, HCA has pointed to Leapfrog ratings as evidence of its high quality and patient safety. The hospital spokeswoman declined to say why Bayonet Point had not participated in the Leapfrog survey.
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