Posted on

continued from page Medicaid of ….

continued from page

Medicaid of Georgia suspending the facility’s provider number. With an accounts receivable balance of over $3 million that was subsequently uncollectable until the numbers are reinstated, there was not enough cash flow to pay employees of Glenwood’s largest employer.

“The problem is that prior to my taking over ownership of the hospital there was a diversion in services during the winter storm in February of this year (2016). After I became owner, it was brought to my attention that there was an issue with the provider numbers as a result of the diversion,” King stated at the time. Charges regarding insurance payments for employees occurred later, with the indictments being handed down in 2018. The health pandemic delayed the case progressing in the courts.

King, a Warner Robins businessman, assumed ownership of the 25-bed medical facility in late February 2016 after a temporary suspension of operations. The facility was progressing through a restructuring and was to reopen under the auspices of Charlton Healthcare Corporation as a critical access hospital March 1, 2016.

Since opening in the early 1960s, the Glenwood hospital provided emergency care and hospitalization for the residents of primarily rural Wheeler County and neighboring Telfair County, which closed its hospital in McRae in 2010. The closest medical centers for these counties are in Dublin, Vidalia, Hazlehurst, and Eastman, each roughly a half-hour or more away. The facility also served the Wheeler County Correctional Facility, owned by Corrections Corporation of America. The facility houses up to 3,000 inmates and has its own medical staff and clinic, but relied on the Glenwood hospital for x-rays and emergency labs.

Built in 1960, the hospital was originally owned by the county but was sold to a private corporation around 1980. The facility expanded in the mid-1980s and once had up to 40 beds.

Share
Recent Death Notices