Keep the Faith

Keep the Faith

We are disappointed that the Public Health Council voted yesterday afternoon to allow the Boston Children's Hospital's $1 billion expansion plan to move forward without any substantive or credible analysis of the consequences. This massive project would increase the price of hospital care, reduce competition, and expose Massachusetts consumers and taxpayers to untold millions of dollars in additional heath care costs. It would also destroy a beautiful, unique therapeutic healing garden that has given give solace to generations of sick children and their families.

Must Read, Must Rally

Must Read, Must Rally

Friends, the Public Health Council is voting TOMORROW on whether Children's should be allowed to build the most expensive hospital expansion in state history. To fully understand all of what's at stake tomorrow, today's Boston Globe column by Joan Vennochi is an absolute MUST READ. If this matters to you, then we hope you will join us TOMORROW at our RALLY TO SAVE PROUTY GARDEN. 12:30 pm in front of the State House. The will of the people will be heard.

The Power of Prouty Garden

The Power of Prouty Garden

Here is a wonderful poem sent to us by a the mother of a former Children's patient. In her note to us, Paula wrote, "My daughter battled cancer for over two years before her death in 2013. Over that two year period she spent many days at Boston's Children's Hospital for hydration, fevers, pneumonia, etc.  We were there almost on a weekly basis for several days.  Our longest stay spanned over two weeks. The Prouty garden was an oasis in the midst of this medical crisis."

JOIN US! State House Rally, 10/20

JOIN US! State House Rally, 10/20

On Thursday, Oct. 20, at 2 p.m., the MA Public Health Council will meet to vote on the DPH staff recommendation to approve the BCH's ill-conceived expansion project. Please join our RALLY on the sidewalk directly in front of the MA State House on Beacon Street, Boston from 12:30 p.m. - 1:30 p.m., on Thursday, Oct. 20. After the rally, we will march to the Public Health Council meeting at 250 Washington Street, and show our support for sending BCH back to the drawing board!

Special wishes in the Children’s Hospital garden

Special wishes in the Children’s Hospital garden

A former Boston Children's Hospital volunteer shared her memory of the Prouty Garden this weekend in Boston Globe Magazine. Her story touches upon the intangible thing that those who have found solace in the Prouty Garden have trouble articulating. It is a sense of wonder that exists in that half-acre healing space. The delight of discovering a hidden statue or fountain, a private shady spot to sit, a bug or a bird or a bunny.

GLOBE: BCH expansion goes beyond Prouty Garden

GLOBE: BCH expansion goes beyond Prouty Garden

"THIS IS NOT about a garden. Not anymore." So opens today's Boston Globe column by Joan Venocchi on what Boston Children's Hospital's proposed expansion project will mean for the pediatric care market in Boston and Massachusetts. "Giving Boston Children’s Hospital the go-ahead for a $1 billion expansion plan will alter the health care landscape beyond a patch of beloved green space. Expansion would allow Children’s to further dominate the pediatric care market, hurt competitors, and drive up health care costs."

HERALD: Prouty’s backers cry foul on DPH

HERALD: Prouty’s backers cry foul on DPH

A Boston Herald article published on Saturday, "Prouty backers cry foul on DPH," took a critical look at the recommended approval. Members of an advocacy group attempting to block Boston Children’s Hospital’s $1 billion planned expansion said the state’s recent recommendation to approve those plans is ill-informed, based on skewed information from the hospital itself. “In effect, the staff has relied on what the hospital provided while giving no weight to outside experts,” said Greg McGregor, lead counsel for the Ten Taxpayer Group and Friends of Prouty Garden.

DPH Approves $1B Expansion

DPH Approves $1B Expansion

We are disappointed that the staff at the Department of Public Health recommended approval of the $1 billion expansion of Children's Hospital without any substantive or credible analysis of the consequences, ignoring both significant concerns raised by the state's own Health Policy Commission, and objections raised by thousands of patients, families, community members, donors and staff who comprise the Friends of the Prouty Garden.

GLOBE: Is Children’s $1b project really necessary?

GLOBE: Is Children’s $1b project really necessary?

A news article in today's Boston Globe asks: "Is Children’s $1b project really necessary?" This is a pivotal question. Children's own data show that the demand for children's hospital care is declining both here and nationally. And, state data show Children’s already has the most expensive physician network in Massachusetts. So, why build? Globe reporter Priyanka McCluskey put that question to area health care experts and physicians at competing hospitals. Read on to find out what they had to say.

REPORT: BCH Expansion Not for Mass. Patients

REPORT: BCH Expansion Not for Mass. Patients

Boston Children’s Hospital’s (BCH) proposed $1 billion expansion project is explicitly designed to serve international and out-of-state patients, with no clear need for its planned services among Massachusetts families, according to a new analysis commissioned by the hospital by order of the state Department of Public Health (DPH). The report also concluded that a five-year trend of declining patient volumes at BCH is expected to continue into the foreseeable future.

A Letter to the HPC

A Letter to the HPC

This week, the Ten Taxpayer Group sent a letter to the Health Policy Commission (HPC), asking them to request a change in the scope of the Hospital's required cost analysis. The letter outlines a number of "grievous inadequacies" of the scope, analyses which they believe would shed light on the true financial implications of the expansion project, especially as it impacts health care costs in Massachusetts.

Owen in the Garden

Owen in the Garden

The Prouty Garden is a vital, integral part of daily life at BCH, especially for the children and families who are inpatient. Kristina, Owen's mom, says the Prouty Garden is what Owen looks forward to every day. She shared this wonderful, touching video of Owen enjoying two simple things — sun on his face and water on his feet — on the July 4th holiday, a day when many people were out enjoying those same things. Except Owen got to do so while still inpatient within the confines the country's leading pediatric hospital.

Prouty Garden Lawsuit Moves Forward

Prouty Garden Lawsuit Moves Forward

In an update to our legal efforts, Judge Kenneth W. Salinger of the Suffolk Superior Court recently ruled to allow the core claim of our ten taxpayer group to move forward, denying the hospital's motion to dismiss. According to our lawyer, “It’s mostly good news for the Friends of Prouty Garden because the lawsuit against Children’s Hospital is intact and it goes forward."