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Welcome to the first edition of Starting Point. Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday morning, we'll bring you reporter insights, interesting articles, things to do/read, and stories from around New England. We hope you like what you see and stick around. Please send suggestions, critiques, bouquets — or anything else — to [email protected].
Concetta McCarthy visited the gravesite of her beloved cousin, Gilberto Melendez-Brancaccio, in Mt. Wollaston Cemetery in Quincy in July. Gilberto was just 31 when he died at Carney Hospital, part of the Steward Health Care chain. BARRY CHIN/GLOBE STAFF
As soon as the Globe began uncovering evidence of Steward Health Care’s grave financial distress earlier this year, the reporters and editors of the Spotlight Team realized they had to not only follow the money, but also find the patients – the men, women, and children victimized by the hospital network’s gross mismanagement.
The Globe’s Jessica Bartlett had reported on one such case: 39-year-old Sungida Rashid died last October after giving birth at St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Brighton because a common medical device that could have stopped the bleeding in her liver had been repossessed by the manufacturer. Why? Steward Health Care, St. E’s parent company and one of the nation’s largest private, for-profit hospital chains, hadn’t paid the bill.
That case raised a question: How many more Sungidas were out there?
Finding such patients turned out to be harder than expected, according to my colleague Liz Kowalczyk, a member of the Spotlight Team and an experienced medical reporter.
“We wanted to distinguish between patients who were hurt because of one person’s mistake from patients who were hurt because Steward had starved a hospital of staff or supplies,” Liz said. “After all, medical errors happen at even the best hospitals. We were trying to uncover something very different.”
The investigative team went to work, taking over a large Globe conference room as they pored over records and debated each case: “Did we have enough information to say lack of staff or equipment was a factor in the patient’s death?” Liz recounted.
Next came another difficult task: Contacting the families whose patients the Spotlight reporters believed had been harmed by Steward’s neglect.
“The families we approached reacted to our questions very differently,” Liz said. “Many welcomed our investigation as a way to better understand what happened to their loved one and to shine light on the injustice of the situation. But some, perhaps still profoundly struggling, closed the door to conversations. Either way, we always tried to be respectful.”
The result was a stunning story of indignity, despair, and death, a tragic chronicle of the vast human toll caused by Steward’s mismanagement as ill patients tried to get treatment at depleted hospitals. The Spotlight Team identified at least 15 instances in which Steward patients died after failing to receive professionally accepted standards of care due to equipment issues or staffing shortages.
Meanwhile, Spotlight also investigated Steward’s finances, and discovered that even as the company was stiffing contractors and failing to give hospitals the necessary equipment and staff, it was making lavish outlays to its CEO, Ralph de la Torre, according to court documents, flight records, company financials, and interviews, including emails obtained by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and shared with the Globe.
Email your thoughts on the Steward situation to [email protected] and we’ll use some of your comments in a future edition.
POINTS OF INTEREST
Foam blasted from a cannon engulfed paradegoers at the annual Caribbean Carnival in Roxbury and Dorchester in August, one of the Globe’s best photos of that month. JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF
ON THE T The Red Line between JFK/UMass and Braintree shut down for track upgrades Friday to get rid of "slow zones," and will stay that way until Sept. 29. You'll have to take shuttle buses instead. (The Boston Globe)
STONINGTON, Maine The storied way of life in this picturesque fishing town is feeling fragile as pressure builds from climate change and economic forces. Now residents are fighting to save their waterfront. (The Boston Globe)
NEW ENGLAND The Globe's best photos from August capture summer euphoria (such as the Caribbean Carnival pictured above), heart-wrenching struggles, and breathtaking nature. A kaleidoscope of life. (The Boston Globe)
D.C. Good news, parents: Teen vaping is declining. Only 6 percent of middle and high school students say they are using e-cigarettes. That's the lowest level in a decade. (Quartz)
METRO BOSTON Speaking of fall, Globe food writer Devra First suggests 10 restaurants opening this autumn that are worth visiting, as well as more than a dozen others that have opened recently or will soon. Vegetable omakase, anyone? (The Boston Globe)
SALEM, Mass. He handles custody disputes, death row cases, and biters. Meet Salem's dog lawyer. (The Boston Globe)
ELECTION INSIGHTS | 57 days until the presidential election
Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump are set to meet on the debate stage Tuesday night, and the Globe’s Washington bureau chief, Jackie Kucinich, told me the stakes are sky-high.
“For a lot of people, it’ll be an introduction to her policies, and she’ll be tested on her ability to advocate for them under questioning and attacks from Trump,” Jackie told me.
Plus, she’ll most likely have to face questions about if — and how — she’ll break from the Biden administration on a variety of issues. That might also mean addressing why she flip-flopped on many of the positions she took during the 2020 Democratic primary, Jackie added.
What’s at stake for Trump:
If he wins, Trump will be the oldest person — he's 78 — to assume the presidency in US history. Will the moderators bring up his age?
Also, “he will be forced to make the case for a second term and that includes likely answering questions on abortion, his anti-democratic rhetoric and his many court cases (which now look like they will be pushed into next year),” Jackie said.
Watch the debate at 9 p.m. Tuesday night on ABC News. And follow our election live blog for all the latest updates on the presidential race.
Where we share our adventures around New England and rate them for Starting Point readers.
Rating: Bagged (💰) | Tagged (🏷️) | Dragged (❌)
Artists Bluff | Franconia, N.H.
Artists Bluff Loop Trail was a satisfying, easy trek for a non-hiker like myself. It’s a well-marked trail (which begins in the Cannon Mountain parking lot) and the view-to-effort ratio is strong.
Rating: Bagged 7/10 (💰)
Kayaking | Charles River
This is bucket-list-worthy. Rent a two-person kayak from Paddle Boston in Allston/Brighton or Kendall Square to save money. But if you splurge for two single kayaks or go with a group, you can take more than just selfies.
Rating: Bagged 9/10(💰)
HEADLINES IN THE CLOUDS
Guess the headline from three choices based on the words that appear in the story.
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