Mingo County’s Only Hospital Reopens

In 1918, Williamson Memorial Hospital opened in Williamson, West Virginia to provide health care services to the residents of rural Mingo County.

After its closure in 2020, Williamson Memorial, the only hospital in Mingo County, was purchased by a local community-based healthcare facility, Williamson Health and Wellness Center, for $3.68 million.

Since then, millions of dollars have been invested in renovating the facility. The building has now been fully renovated, from its electrical system to its sanitation lines — with state-of-the-art equipment and an air-quality system that meets the latest regulatory standards.

In a Sept. 12 press release, the hospital announced that the West Virginia Office of Health Facility Licensure and Certification (OHFLAC) recently surveyed and licensed the facility to operate a 76-bed general hospital.

“This is a victory for our entire community,” said Williamson Health and Wellness Center CEO Dr. C. Donovan “Dino” Beckett. “The new Williamson Memorial is part of the fabric of the Tug Valley and all those who live and work here. It is critical to our integrated care system and our goal of health for everyone.”

According to a report from the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform, almost 200 rural hospitals have closed since 2005. 

Beckett said the new Williamson Memorial will rely on integration with Williamson Health and Wellness Center, a federally qualified health center, to bolster its long-term viability.

“Our integrated care model will help us ensure the new Williamson Memorial is not only back but is here to stay for generations to come,” Beckett said.

Tim Hatfield, CEO of the new Williamson Memorial, said the facility’s reopening is especially important for the community in the post-pandemic healthcare landscape.

“I’ve talked to the National Rural Healthcare Association in [Washington] D.C., and they told me in the past that our hospital was the first hospital to close because of the pandemic and COVID,” Hatfield said. “There’s been 30 hospitals to close after we closed related to COVID, but we are the first hospital that has ever reopened.”

Hatfield said the reopening of the hospital is a vital component of Williamson Health and Wellness’ goal to provide a continuum of care.

“It’s pretty special in 2024 to see any hospital in America that’s opening up,” Hatfield said. “The way we envision this with the FQHC (Federally Qualified Health Center), the clinics, we’ve got behavioral health, we’ve got family medicine, podiatry, occupational health, we got the Post 49 Farmers Market, dentistry, optometry, and now with the onboarding of the hospital, we provide a lot of comprehensive care to meet the community’s needs.”

While expanding access to care takes precedence for the Williamson Memorial team, the hospital’s reopening also creates employment opportunities with benefits in Mingo County. Hatfield says 65 percent of the hospital’s employees who worked at the hospital before it closed have returned to take care of their neighbors.

“About 65 percent of our employees that were here in 2020, left to go someplace else to work, but couldn’t wait to come back to work in our hospital, just because of the small town community feel hospital of taking care of your neighbors and friends,” Hatfield said. “That’s pretty neat.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

State Supreme Court Hears Arguments on AmerisourceBergen’s Insurance Litigation Timeline

The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals heard two cases Tuesday morning involving AmerisourceBergen, a major drug company involved in opioid settlements with the state.

AmerisourceBergen has asked two of its insurance companies – ACE American and St. Paul – to pay for their opioid settlement costs. However, the case the state Supreme Court heard Tuesday morning is about whether litigation on AmerisourceBergen’s insurance coverage in West Virginia should influence how and when parallel cases in other states, centering on Delaware, should continue. 

Lawyers argued whether AmerisourceBergen sought a “preferable” state judiciary system rather than letting cases in other states proceed at the same time. Arguments to halt the other cases concern the concept of “comity,” which involves respecting other state’s judicial systems and consistency between rulings.

Chief Justice Tim Armstead voluntarily disqualified himself from hearing the case on Sept. 12. Armstead cited the general disqualification rule in the Code of Judicial Conduct but did not provide further comment. Judge Robert Ryan from the Twenty-First Judicial Circuit sat in on temporary assignment.

The court’s fall term ends in November.

Marshall Health Continues Clinical Trials To Better Treat Neonatal Opioid Withdrawals

A new clinical trial at Marshall may provide help for babies born after being exposed to opioids using a non-opioid medicine. 

Twenty-four eligible newborns at the Marshall Health Network’s Hoops Family Children’s Hospital will participate in the second cohort of clinical trials.

Medical research teams working through the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine and Marshall Health Network aim to evaluate the safety and efficacy of oral lofexidine. This is  a non-opioid investigational medication meant for newborns who suffer from neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS) or neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) due to prenatal exposure to opioids.

Lofexidine is an alternative to the adverse effects of opioid medications such as morphine or methadone. Researchers say unlike opioids, lofexidine does not produce euphoria, the potential for addiction or prolong the withdrawal process in newborns.

The randomized, controlled clinical trial will enroll up to 24 eligible newborns at Hoops Family Children’s Hospital at Cabell Huntington Hospital. Hoops houses a Neonatal Therapeutic Unit (NTU), which provides specialized, comprehensive care for infants prenatally exposed to opioids. 

The study will evaluate the duration of treatment, need for rescue medication and length of hospital stay.

In previous clinical studies of lofexidine in adults, the most common adverse events were orthostatic hypotension, bradycardia, hypotension, dizziness, somnolence, sedation, and dry mouth.

Enrollment in the clinical trial is ongoing and targeted to be completed by the end of 2024. Results from this study will be used to support

dosing recommendations in neonates and to inform further studies in the pediatric patient population.

Marshall Health Network spokespeople say Hoops is the first hospital in the country to offer this non-opioid investigational treatment option for NOWS newborns.

Religious Leaders Unite To Help Those Seeking To End Pregnancies

It’s been two years since Gov. Jim Justice signed a near-total ban on abortions into West Virginia law. But there are loopholes and travel funds that have allowed abortions to continue – sometimes with the guidance of pro-choice religious leaders. Now some of those leaders are joining forces, just as they did in the days before Roe vs. Wade. 

Back in the late 1960s, when Rev. Jim Lewis was an Episcopalian priest in Martinsburg, West Virginia, women regularly sought his counsel in handling troubled pregnancies – whether they wanted to keep the babies, put them up for adoption or abort. 

“They came to talk to me because they couldn’t talk to parents, talk to their boyfriend, talk to anyone around who could help,” Lewis said.  “Everyone had answers. This is what you should do. I didn’t do that.”

At the time, abortions were illegal in West Virginia and most of the nation. They were allowed in a handful of states and under very specific circumstances. A non-denominational group of religious leaders formed the Clergy Consultation Service on Abortion, or CCSA, in New York where it was legal. They helped to facilitate abortions for patients from out of state.

“A minister named Howard Moody in Greenwich Village began it with a group of Jews, Protestants, and Catholics. They came together in New York because you could get an abortion in New York, and they formed this consultation network. And that’s where I began connecting to that,” Lewis said.

He reached out to Moody. 

“He came to West Virginia, and he met with a group of us, maybe 10, 12, 15, from around the state. And we joined together and formed, really, what was a consultation that worked right here in West Virginia,” Lewis said.

Through the West Virginia chapter of the CCSA, Lewis oversaw the Eastern Panhandle. His role, he said, was to help women do what they decided was right for them – including ending a pregnancy. 

“All the situations were different. There were married women. There were people who had had personal either incest or particularly, violence – [they were] beaten,” he said.

Lewis said he doesn’t see a conflict between his strong religious views and his support for women’s rights – including abortion. But the pro-life movement is largely driven by Christians who view the issue of abortion very differently – as a sin. Even murder.

“I understand, but we need to protect a woman’s right,” Lewis said. “The only thing I want from the legislature is, people should keep out. I want the legislature to protect women… because it’s their bodies, and they have to make these decisions.” 

In January 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court essentially agreed, ruling that the U.S. Constitution protected a woman’s right to abortion. Half a century later, Lewis was in Charleston and semi-retired when the court reversed itself in 2022, ending the constitutional right to abortion.

“When it all got thrown back on the states, do we do something by referendum? Do we do something by giving it to the legislature to create law? Oh, my God, and that’s what we did,” Lewis said. “To leave it in the hands of the legislature or the governor was deadly.” 

On Sept. 16, 2022, Justice signed a bill banning all abortions in the state, except in cases of medical emergency or for victims of rape and incest until eight weeks of pregnancy for adults and 14 weeks for children. Since then, pro-choice advocates have funded travel to other states for abortions, and have guided West Virginians seeking to end a pregnancy.

Margaret Chapman Pomponio is the executive director of West Virginia Free, which advocates for reproductive health access. She and Lewis decided to attend a New Orleans gathering of the Spiritual Alliance of Communities for Reproductive Dignity, or SACReD, earlier this year.

“It was a gathering of spiritual people to talk about reproductive rights and justice in this post-Roe world, and figure out how as spiritual people we are called in this moment to help people connect with what they need to live safe, fulfilling lives, and that means being in charge of their reproductive destinies,Chapman Pomponio said.

There, with Protestant, Catholics, Jews and other advocates, they led a panel discussion on resurrecting a modern-day version of the Clergy Consultation Service on Abortion. 

“It was a tremendous reception. There was a lot of joy in the room. There was a lot of brimming excitement about putting this together again in a new way,” Chapman Pomponio said.

There are similarities, she said, but reproductive health today is not the same as it was all those years ago.

“We are surrounded by a number of states where you can go and get an abortion. But the other thing that’s really different now is medication abortion,” she said. “The government cannot get into our mail. So pills are being sent to all 50 states across this country, and people are self managing at home.”

Outreach to spiritual leaders across the state has already begun. Later this month, a conference call with advocates out of state interested in forming a network… and early next year, they hope, training for clergy will get underway.

“The beauty of this is, we don’t have to be underground. So we can talk about this. And I guarantee you, people are going to be coming to us and saying, ‘I want to be part of that,’ just like they did then, but even more so now,” Chapman Pomponio said.

Lewis is once again part of leading the efforts in West Virginia. With a long history of battles behind him, from the Vietnam War to the banning of textbooks, women’s rights is one fight he says he plans to continue.

“I’m 88 years old, and I only got a couple more years, and I made the commitment to really focus those years,” he said. “I’ve been involved with a whole lot of issues, but I see underneath that women’s issues. So I’m saying the last years of my life are going to be spent working at that.”

State Employee Health Insurance Ends Pilot Program To Treat Obesity, Related Illness

Advocates of a pilot program that covered expensive weight loss medications for West Virginia state employees say the state will end up paying more for obesity-related health problems. In March, the state’s Public Employees Insurance Agency (PEIA) canceled a 1,000-person pilot program that covered the medications due in part to the cost of the medicines.

Now lawmakers and health officials are working behind the scenes to find a solution.

West Virginia is not alone in its struggles with obesity. Before 2013, no state in the U.S. had an adult obesity rate at or above 35 percent. Ten years later, in 2023, data from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) found that almost half the nation – 23 states including West Virginia – had reached that level, with more than one in three adults, or 35 percent, listed as clinically obese.

However, West Virginia’s obesity problem is more pervasive than in other states. According to 2024 CDC data, 41.6 percent of West Virginian adults are obese. The same report shows 24.8 percent of youth ages 10 to 17 are obese, giving West Virginia a ranking of 51 among the 50 states and D.C.

Searching For Solutions

In recent years, weight loss drugs like Ozempic have become household names. This type of drug is called a GLP-1, which stands for glucagon-like peptide receptor agents. These drugs treat Type 2 diabetes and obesity. Zepbound, Mounjaro and Wegovy are also well-known GLP-1s.

The current list price – which is set by the drug manufacturer before applying insurance or discounts – for Ozempic is $968.52 per month. When prescribed, patients take four doses per month, one dose per week.

According to a New York Times article that spotlighted West Virginia in the nation’s struggle to afford weight loss medication, most Medicaid programs cover these medications to manage diabetes. Medicare covers Wegovy and Zepound when they are prescribed for heart problems.

PEIA director Brian Cunningham told the New York Times in June that West Virginia’s pilot program cost around $1.3 million a month, despite rebates from manufacturers for a little more than 1,000 patients.

The Pilot Program At Work

Laura Davisson is West Virginia University’s (WVU) director of Medical Weight Management, a professor, and associate program director for internal medicine. She said West Virginia’s obesity problem can no longer be ignored.

“Not every single patient is a candidate for surgical treatment, and now we have these medicines that are out there that are fantastic,” Davisson said. “They’re giving really great results. They’re very well tolerated and these are tools that we need to have in our toolbox so that we can give each individual patient the full spectrum of treatment options.”

PEIA started the pilot program in 2019 to assist members with the cost of GLP-1s. PEIA provides health coverage for more than 230,000 public employees and retirees.

“We can have a lot more success if we do this systematically and medically, rather than just continuing, which we’ve done for decades now, of telling people just eat less and exercise more, because we’ve been doing that and it’s not working,” Davisson said.

However, on March 15, 2024, PEIA paused the pilot program due, in part, to the rising cost of GLP-1s. The state honored existing pre-authorizations through June 30th or the term of authorization, whichever was longer.

State officials told MetroNews in August that reasons for pausing the program were “multifaceted,” but included cost, supply shortages, potential side effects and inconclusive results.

“Since they announced canceling the pilot, I have met with them again and given them all the data I could come up with, but from their patients, I’ve shown them data showing that return patients of theirs in the pilot that have come to see us have shown a 15.4 percent decrease in their body mass index,” Davisson said.

Cassie Maxwell is a wife and mom from Morgantown. She has been living with obesity since her late teenage years and says she has experienced a significant amount of stigma around her weight.

“Lots of medical problems that I had were very dismissed,” Maxwell said. “There were lots of false assumptions that my weight was related to willpower, and was just told over and over by numerous doctors, eat less and move more, eat less and move more, and it wasn’t working.”

Maxwell was diagnosed with polycystic ovarian syndrome and insulin resistance. Two and a half years ago, her primary care physician referred her to the medical weight management clinic at WVU.

“I was able to actually get comprehensive evidence-based care for my obesity, which is a chronic health condition, and then I was able to get this comprehensive treatment that included behavioral therapy, it included access to exercise physiologists, access to registered dieticians, and for me, it also included medication,” Maxwell said.

Maxwell said her GLP-1 prescription radically changed her and her family’s lives by allowing her to lose almost 150 pounds.

“The main reason I qualified for the program is because I had reached pre-diabetic numbers, I no longer am in that range,” Maxwell said. “I no longer have high blood pressure. My cholesterol is better than my husband’s, so I’m doing really great cholesterol-wise. My sleep apnea has gone away. All of these things that were that I needed treatment for medically have all improved.”

Maxwell found out she was part of the GLP-1 pilot program when she learned it was ending.

“All of these were things that I needed treatment for medically have all improved, and my insurance is pretty much telling me all of those things need to come back,” Maxwell said. “You even need to get sicker before we’re willing to cover your chronic medical condition, which isn’t fair, because they cover every other chronic medical condition.”

Legislative Efforts To Save The Program

During the 2024 regular legislative session, Del. Kayla Young, D-Kanawha, introduced House Bill 4979 to provide insurance coverage for GLP-1 class medications with a valid prescription after hearing from “dozens” of constituents.

“West Virginia has really high rates of heart disease, and various chronic diseases, many of which are caused by weight, or where weight is at least a factor,” Young said. “I know that we’re spending so much money on taking care of West Virginians and their health concerns, and if this is a medication that can help to get them to a healthy place where they can live longer lives and feel happier and be healthier, I don’t know why we wouldn’t be providing that medication that seems to be working for a very large population of people.”

The bill never moved past the House Committee on Banking and Insurance.

During a special session of the legislature in May of 2024, Del. John Williams, D-Monongalia, introduced another bill in the House in an attempt to save the program, House Bill 116, to require PEIA to reimburse covered persons for GLP-1 agonist medications prescribed by a physician for weight loss.

“This issue is really coming to a head with these individuals losing their coverage,” Williams said. “So I thought that it would have been a failure on my part, on the people I’ve talked to, to not at least try.”

William’s bill never made it past the House Finance Committee.

The Cost Of Care

Davisson and Maxwell agree West Virginia will end up paying for its obesity problem, one way or another.

“It made absolutely no sense to me. If we look at sheer numbers, right, if we just look at the cost of obesity-related health care conditions and know that it is treatable, and to say, ‘No, I’m going to stop covering this, and I’d like to take on all of those additional health care costs.’ Sounds completely ludicrous, but yet here we are,” Maxwell said.

Sen. Tom Takubo, R-Kanawha is the Chair of the Joint Standing Committee on Insurance and PEIA.

“Every year, one of the most difficult things for any business, whether it’s small or large or government, is healthcare cost, and these medications for PEIA had quickly climbed to about $90 million so that completely breaks the bank,” Takubo said.

Takubo acknowledged the effectiveness of the medication and the implications of treating obesity in a state with rates as high as West Virginia’s but says his job as a legislator is to pass a balanced budget.

“We certainly want to keep insurance viable for state employees, and that one class of medication has just gone crazy in terms of cost, and so lot of balls in the air on that one,” Takubo said. “So we’re just trying to work a way through it.”

Takubo says he and his colleagues in the legislature are working “creatively behind the scenes,” speaking with the manufacturers of GLP-1’s.

“There needs to be parameters around qualifying criteria and things like that that have to also be developed,” Takubo said. “But we’re working on all the above.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Applications Open For First Round Of W.Va. Opioid Settlement Grants

The foundation responsible for dispersing West Virginia’s opioid settlement money has approved the launch of the application process for its first grant cycle.

The West Virginia First Foundation’s (WVFF) board approved $19.2 million in Initial Opportunity Grants during its meeting on Sept. 5. That is about 8.5 percent of the funds the foundation currently holds, according to its July financial statement. West Virginia is expected to receive about $1 billion in total after all its opioid settlement lawsuits are paid out.

“The need is now,” Jonathan Board, executive director of the WVFF, said. “The need is greater today than it was yesterday, and it’ll be greater tomorrow than it is today.”

The 2024 Initial Opportunity Grants focus on four target areas that have been identified by the Initial Opportunity Committee, formed during August’s board meeting. Those four areas are considered critical in the fight against the opioid crisis and are prioritized for funding.

“We talked with our board members, we talked with the Initial Opportunity Committee, all of whom have their own lived experience. They have direct access to these services, and they know where the gaps in services are, and so taking all of that together, they targeted these areas that would have the most immediate impact across the state, not just one region, but throughout the state,” Board said.

The Target Areas include diversion programs, which help people arrested for drug use avoid conviction and incarceration by diverting them to treatment options instead, and interdiction programs, which work to prevent illicit drugs from reaching their destinations.

Target Areas also include youth prevention and workforce development, child advocacy centers, neonatal abstinence programs and transitional and recovery housing expansion.

“We didn’t want to be exclusive,” Board said. “We want to make sure that this is equitably applied to everyone. So whether you’re a small shop that’s focused on healing one individual at a time, or a really large organization that’s working with hundreds of folks throughout the state, we want to make sure everyone has an equal voice.”

During this first round of funding, each of the state’s six regions could receive $800,000 per Target Area, with up to four awards per Target Area per region.

“We do see future grants being larger and more often,” Board said. “The amount that was chosen was a way that we could ensure that every region had an equal amount, instead of just based on a share, developed by some other mathematical equation. We wanted everyone to have equal access to an equal amount.”

This grant cycle is open to tax-exempt 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations, tax-exempt organizations under IRC 115 or other similar organizations that fulfill a charitable or public purpose, excluding for-profit entities.

While not mandatory, applicants are encouraged to submit a Notice of Intent to Apply. According to the foundation’s website, this notice will remain confidential and does not extend the application deadline.

Applications are due before midnight on Oct. 5, via PDF file, sent by email to the Foundation Contact and Executive Director, Jonathan Board at iog@wvfirst.org.

Applications will be reviewed by the Interim Grant Committee and the Expert Panel. Final approval will be made by the Board of Directors.

Awards will be announced on or before Dec. 31. Grantees will first receive 40 percent of their total allotment up front, then file financial statements with the foundation documenting the use of the funds to receive three more, 20 percent installments to complete the award.

“We want to know where the money is going and how it’s going, and probably most importantly if they need assistance in working through the process and advancing the mission and vision of each organization because that becomes a part of us,” Board said.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

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