R
Ridgerunner
Guest
This is a far-out notion, but I’m going to submit it.
Hospitals, anymore, are mostly gargantuan enterprieses, or perhaps more accurately, a part of gargantuan enterprises that include mega-clinics and subsidiary organizations of every kind.
There are a lot of reasons for that, which would take too much time to explore in one post. A couple of things, though, are clear to me.
First, many of the old orders of nuns who operated the early Catholic hospitals have imploded or gone secular. It seems likely the “going secular” has caused the “implosion”, because some of the newer orders that are faithful to both the Magisterium of the Church and true community, have more applicants than they can handle, while the old secularized orders are dying out. Second, the capital investment is so staggeringly huge that no new religious group could reallly enter into that “market”.
What I find truly puzzling is why various Church organizations, including Dioceses, seem to have so little interest in establishing nursing homes. Anymore, nursing homes are the “hospitals” to which people must go when the insurance company or government says it will no longer pay for hospitalization. In the future, that can only increase. Where I live, hospital care is about $1,000/day while nursing home care is about a tenth of that.
At least where I live, nursing homes are independent of the big hospital/clinic complexes, and can manage to remain so. There is little doubt in my mind that if, say, a Diocesan nursing home was of interest in my diocese at least, there would be plenty of qualified administrators, nurses and paraprofessionals who would work for less if the atmosphere was truly Catholic and charitable. The number of “part timers” and volunteers would not likely be wanting either. I would be at least a bit surprised if some orders of religious men and women didn’t come to be in order to serve some of society’s truly abandoned and truly needy ones in that context, if the capital investment was there. The funding is already available, except for the initial capital investment. (and yes, I know what it costs, I have handled the sale of some of them) Looking at the cost of some of the new church buildings and parish halls, I know the money is there. What I don’t understand is why the motivation isn’t.
Hospitals, anymore, are mostly gargantuan enterprieses, or perhaps more accurately, a part of gargantuan enterprises that include mega-clinics and subsidiary organizations of every kind.
There are a lot of reasons for that, which would take too much time to explore in one post. A couple of things, though, are clear to me.
First, many of the old orders of nuns who operated the early Catholic hospitals have imploded or gone secular. It seems likely the “going secular” has caused the “implosion”, because some of the newer orders that are faithful to both the Magisterium of the Church and true community, have more applicants than they can handle, while the old secularized orders are dying out. Second, the capital investment is so staggeringly huge that no new religious group could reallly enter into that “market”.
What I find truly puzzling is why various Church organizations, including Dioceses, seem to have so little interest in establishing nursing homes. Anymore, nursing homes are the “hospitals” to which people must go when the insurance company or government says it will no longer pay for hospitalization. In the future, that can only increase. Where I live, hospital care is about $1,000/day while nursing home care is about a tenth of that.
At least where I live, nursing homes are independent of the big hospital/clinic complexes, and can manage to remain so. There is little doubt in my mind that if, say, a Diocesan nursing home was of interest in my diocese at least, there would be plenty of qualified administrators, nurses and paraprofessionals who would work for less if the atmosphere was truly Catholic and charitable. The number of “part timers” and volunteers would not likely be wanting either. I would be at least a bit surprised if some orders of religious men and women didn’t come to be in order to serve some of society’s truly abandoned and truly needy ones in that context, if the capital investment was there. The funding is already available, except for the initial capital investment. (and yes, I know what it costs, I have handled the sale of some of them) Looking at the cost of some of the new church buildings and parish halls, I know the money is there. What I don’t understand is why the motivation isn’t.