Close Op REBIRTH page 37 By the year 2000, Sinai's city campus will be expanded to look like this artist's rendering. THE D ETR OIT JEWI SH NE WS Dr. Sabbota would agree: "Sinai (lat- er) saw the error of its ways. I think the hospital is a lot more attuned to physi- cians' issues now." Solid communication between doc- tors and other hospital staff, as well as the speedy return of laboratory tests, are two plus-points for Sinai, he says. Still, every once in a while, commu- nity gossip calls into question whether Sinai isn't again 4osing its physicians to non-Jewish institutions. Raymond Weitzman, a rheumatolo- gist and doctor of internal medicine with the DMC, says he was once at Sinai. So were many of his colleagues who now work elsewhere. But, he points out,-the tide flows both ways. "People are just jumping around everywhere. The grass is always green- er on the other side of the fence," he says. Job-hopping seems epidemic in the health-care field. Large systems, which incorporate several hospitals, are gen- erally more immune to financial trou- bles than independent institutions like Sinai. But some medical profession- als say the red tape of vast conglomer- ates propels them toward smaller arenas. Big and little alike, however, are bracing for cutbacks in Medicaid and 38 Phillip Schaengold: President and CEO Mervyn Manning: Board Chair more shrinkage in reimbursements from insurance companies. Sinai, like other facilities, grapples with cost-shift- ing, the process of charging private payers for what goes uncovered by gov- ernment programs. Amidst these challenges and others, Sinai nevertheless has attempted to maintain its Jewish programming. Each summer, it supplies medical as- sistance to Fresh Air Society camps. Administrators and doctors recently re- turned from a trip to Israel, where they met with medical professionals in De- troit's Partnership 2000 sister region. Sinai's West Bloomfield Day Hospi- tal, directed by Dr. Albert Bayer, es- tablished a. program for the mentally disoriented elderly. Most of its patients come from the growing geriatric Jew- ish population. The Sinai Guild provides services and volunteer opportunities to Jews, old and young. The Foundation pro- motes and sponsors everything from the annual Heritage Ball fund-raiser to educational activities, such as speeches by Jewish health-care pro- fessionals. Among other commitments, the hos- pital offers free care to near-destitute immigrants from the former Soviet Union. Although local anti-Semitism Samuel Indenbaum: Chief of Staff Ambivalence isn't the word 75-year- old Farmington Hills resident Shirley Korobkin would use to describe her feel- ings toward Sinai, even though all four of her Jewish specialists are based at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. "You go where they go," she says. "If I had a choice, I'd go to Sinai. Jewish hospitals cater more to your (Jewish) needs. The others say if you want a kosher meal, they'll give it to you. But I don't know how kosher it really is." Near a set of central elevators at Beaumont, an ashen-faced couple ex- plains that their elderly relative was rushed to the hospital late that night after having a stroke. Like many peo- ple who face emergencies, this couple says that heading toward a specifical- ly Jewish hospital in times of crisis isn't as important as just getting their loved one to a safe place — quickly. "I don't think the quality of care at Sinai has deteriorated any. I think the big problem is location," said the DMC's Dr. Weitzman. "It's perceived as an in- ner-city hospital, like Grace." Nationally, watch-dog groups are struggling to find ways of gauging sat- isfaction with patient care. The Illinois based Joint Commission On Accredita- tion Of Healthcare Organizations comes is no longer a prevailing concern among closest with its biennial surveys of 5,300 the majority of metro Jews, it still pro- hospitals across the country. vides a reason for people like Alexan- The three-to-five-day JCAHO in- dra Riabova to be,grateful Sinai exists.- spections monitor staff, infection con- Dr. Riabova, 27, completed medical trol, fire safety and other broad areas school in Moscow before moving to Ann of concern. Sinai has maintained its ac- Arbor in 1992. After passing her li- creditation since 1969. censing exams, she applied to post- "We want to make sure that hospi- graduate programs at Sinai and other tals not only are writing policies for area hospitals. quality care, but also implementing The interview at Sinai, she says, them," says JCAHO spokeswoman Al- went well and doctors in the depart- ice Brown. ment of internal medicine offered her But patient satisfaction (versus qual- admittance to a four-month training ity of patient care) is tougher to evalu- program designed specifically for im- ate on anything but an anecdotal basis migrant physicians. Then came a one- — especially within the 96,000-mem- year internship. Now, Dr. Riabova is ber Jewish community. For each per- working on her three-year residency at son who complains about a hospital, Sinai. there are others who sing its praises. "In Russia, there was anti-Semitism One elderly woman living in metro on all levels," she says. "It was pretty Detroit's southern suburbs referred to scary, actually. Jews didn't get accept- Sinai's nursing care as mediocre. Oth- ed to schools they wanted. It was dan- er patients say that it indeed had fal- gerous to go to synagogue." tered in the 1980s, but has improved President Schaengold stresses that since that time. Sinai Hospital will continue to reach The Jewish News spoke with mem- out to the Jewish community, but it's bers of the.community who prefer Sinai time the Jewish community reaches over Beaumont, Beaumont over Sinai, back. Sinai over the DMC, the DMC over "The medical community," he says, Sinai ... and so on and so forth with "has regained its respect and confidence Grace, Providence, Botsford, etc. in Sinai. (But) I think the Jewish com- Some members of the Jewish com- munity still remains ambivalent." munity say they know of people who fear the inner city and others who resent the that Sinai no longer caters to a Jewish majority. However, Jews also seem far from passive in their attitudes toward Michigan's only Jew- ish hospital. They say they are glad to have it. They express relief over its comeback. "The feeling you get at Sinai is palpable," Dr. Sabbota says. "It's a heimish feeling. A friendly feeling. A feeling that you're at home." 1=1 Pola Friedman: Sandy Schwartz: Richard Roth: Foundation Chair Foundation Director Guild President