BMC Renal Dialysis Unit Receives High Marks in CMS Report

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Renal Dialysis Unit at Berkshire Medical Center has been documented as providing remarkable patient care results in the past four years, according to a facility report issued by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

The report includes Medicare data that is collected by CMS for all dialysis units across the country and issued annually to state health departments and dialysis centers. Some of the data is also publicly reported on the Dialysis Facility Compare website. The information includes survival rates, hospitalization rates, adequacy of dialysis, anemia management, transplantation statistics and dialysis access rates.

For the period from 2006 to 2009, 24 percent fewer patients on dialysis at BMC died compared to other dialysis units in the US. This means that patients on dialysis at BMC were 24 percent more likely to survive than if they were on dialysis at another facility. In 2009 alone, 41percent of patients at BMC were more likely to survive than if they were treated elsewhere.

"This is the result of a very dedicated team of providers who work tirelessly every day to be sure all of our patients receive nothing but the best care," said Dr. David Henner, medical director of the BMC Dialysis Unit.

Several other pieces of data from the report point to the quality of the BMC Dialysis Unit. The hospitalization rate of patients from the BMC unit was 24 percent lower than the national average, and BMC dialysis patients spent 25 percent fewer days in the hospital compared to other units. For patients under 70 years old on dialysis at BMC, 98 percent more received a kidney transplant than comparable units in the US. In 2009, 99 percent of BMC patients had adequate clearance of toxins from their blood during dialysis, compared to 96 percent for the rest of the country.

Other data included: 85 percent of patients at BMC had ideal management of anemia compared to 81percent of patients nationwide; 49 percent of new patients starting dialysis at BMC had AV Fistula in place, the preferred dialysis access for survival on dialysis, according to the National Kidney Foundation, compared to 32percent across the country; and in 2009, 68 percent of all patients on dialysis at BMC had AV Fistula in place compared to 61percent nationally.

"These results are very impressive, and they show that the patients in our community who need this vital treatment are receiving care that is above and beyond similar centers across the United States," said Diane Kelly, RN, BMC Chief Operating Officer. "I congratulate this dynamic, incredible team for their ongoing success."
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Mill Town Closes on Site 9, Woodlawn Ave. Property

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The first purchase of land at Site 9 in the William Stanley Business Park has gone through. 

Mill Town Capital has closed on 4.7 acres on the overhauled GE site once described as looking like the face of the moon, as well as some land across the street for a residential building. The purchase price is $200,000. 

"This is an exciting moment because Mill Town was at the table at the very, very beginning of the grant process for the cracking and crushing and greening of Site 9. They've stood by us every step of the way," board Chair Jonathan Denmark said to the Pittsfield Economic Development Authority last week. 

"It's also a monumental occasion, because after 25-something years, this is the first land sale from the William Stanley Business Park, and we're all excited." 

Mill Town in 2024 announced its intent to purchase acreage on Site 9 and land across the street at 100 Woodlawn Ave.  

The 16-acre parcel at the corner of Woodlawn Avenue and Tyler Street Extension previously housed a General Electric factory and is the largest and most prominent section of the business park. Now, it is greened over with a loop of paved access road. 

There was some reference to recent hesitancy about the estimate of high construction costs, but the investment firm reportedly chose to proceed because of its faith in this location.  

Pittsfield's Business Development Manager Michael Coakley said Mill Town will need to make the numbers work and then find a tenant before breaking ground, and that it won't be right away. The closing had on the site had been the day prior. 

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