Daughters of Charity Sr. Carol Keehan, who has been involved in
negotiations with government and church leaders about the new health
care law, said Wednesday that Catholic providers face important
challenges as they seek to offer mission-driven services in a rapidly
changing health care structure.
Keehan, president of the Catholic Health Association since 2005, has
more than 35 years of experience working in Catholic health care. She
spoke before a crowded auditorium at Jesuit-run Rockhurst University in
Kansas City, Mo.
"Tonight I come to you as someone who believes Catholic health care
is a treasure for the United States," she said. "We have a stellar
history in this nation from the beginnings with the Ursuline community
-- and the first Catholic hospital in the United States opened in New
Orleans -- to what goes on in our Catholic hospitals to this very day."
Catholic health care providers employ more than 800,000 people, has
19 million emergency room visits every year and more than 100 million
visits for outpatient care, she said. There are about 630 Catholic
hospitals in the United States and 1,600 Catholic continuing care
facilities, she said.
Keehan said the challenges facing those hospitals and other care
centers include rising costs, implementing the law known as the
Affordable Care Act, maintaining the mission Catholic services, changes
in science and technology, and the freedom to care for the poor and most
vulnerable. Keehan also touched on the division in the church that has
been fueled by the new law.
"Basically, the church's teachings on the dignity of persons and what
that means in a social, economic and health care context has been
invaluable to this country," she said. "However, there have been at
times significant distortions of the church's teaching and in my
judgment at times these have been as destructive and problematic as
rejections of the church's teaching."
Keehan laid out the complexities of concerns of Catholics leaders of
what the Affordable Care Act will require companies to cover and what
conversations are happening among Catholic schools, parishes, hospitals
and universities to overcome these challenges.
Comparing the trials of passing the current bill to those of the
Medicare bill of the early 1960s, Keehan said, "Let me be really clear
that the Affordable Care Act is not the bill I would have passed. I
doubt that it is the bill that any member of Congress or the White House
staff would have passed. It is the bill we could get passed."
As an underlying theme, she also focused on preparing laymen and
women to effectively lead health care systems to meet these challenges.
"Sisters spent an enormous amount of time and resources in
educational programs, mentoring programs and development programs to
prepare management staff, governance members and now sponsors for
Catholic health care," she said. "Laypeople are accepting the
responsibility for a ministry of the church and that is a significant
responsibility to take on."
She said in 1968, there were 770 religious CEOs and only 26 lay CEOs
running Catholic hospitals. Today, four religious CEOs and 626 lay CEOs
lead those institutions.
Keehan ended her talk by saying, "It is important to remember that as
we face these challenges, the option to give up is not possible and the
care of the sick is a Gospel mandate."
"A church that does not care for the sick, promote health and show
special concern for the vulnerable would have a hard time claiming to
follow the Gospel of Jesus Christ."