Sierra Vista Hospital suspended general-surgery services Feb. 11 due to the disruption of twice having to cancel procedures when spikes in pandemic cases forced the governor to prohibit elective surgeries statewide.
“The open, close, open, close has been horrible—it’s had a horrible impact” said hospital CEO Eric Stokes, who has overseen the suspension of elective surgeries two times since he joined the hospital in October. The first shutdown ran from the end of November to early December, and the second ran from Dec. 10 to the second week in January. “All the surgeries had to be cancelled and rescheduled and all the [rescheduled] patients had to be retested for COVID. There have been impacts on insurance and clinic visits. There is a lot of financial liability involved.”
There is no timetable for when general surgical services will be restarted. “If I can’t guarantee a high-quality, financially viable service,” Stokes explained, “then we shouldn’t be offering it. I don’t know when we might offer general surgery again, but we couldn’t do it right now.”
A new operating room was part of the hospital’s $31 million expansion, for which the final phases of construction were completed five months ago. The hospital had a general surgeon on contract, Stokes said, but demurred answering whether the contract was cancelled or wasn’t renewed, to avoid attaching any negative implication to the surgeon’s departure.
Asked what procedures the hospital offered, Stokes said, “colonoscopies, hernia, gallbladder and appendix operations.”
A reader tipped the Sun the hospital was no longer offering general surgical services. “Doesn’t the community deserve to be told about this?” the reader asked.
Stokes said hospital staff, emergency room staff, referring doctors and all patients with pending surgical procedures were notified.
“David Reitter, M.D., Specialty: Surgeon,” is still listed on the hospital’s website.