A Florida hospital filed a lawsuit to remove a former patient who has occupied an inpatient room for five months after doctors cleared her to go. Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare says the woman was formally discharged on Oct. 6, and she’s still there.
The case captures a maddening reality in American health care: a system so tangled in process that a hospital must beg a judge for permission to reclaim its own bed.
TMH filed the complaint earlier this month, as Fox News Digital reported. The hospital wants a court order forcing the unnamed woman to leave and authorizing the Leon County Sheriff’s Office to escort her out if she refuses. A hearing is set for March 30.
The filing spells out what the hospital tried before going to court:
None of it worked.
As AP News reported, the patient has remained in Room 373 since her October discharge. That single occupied bed carries real weight. The complaint states plainly that “TMH has limited inpatient beds.”
The hospital’s lawsuit puts the cost in human terms:
“Defendant’s continued occupancy prevents use of the bed for patients needing acute care.”
Every day that room stays occupied, someone who actually needs hospital care may wait longer, or get turned away. The Washington Times confirmed the hospital argues her continued stay diverts resources and blocks an acute-care bed from serving other patients.
TMH declined to explain the backstory. In an email to Fox News Digital, the hospital said:
“TMH is not able to discuss active legal matters, including background details.”
That leaves big gaps. The complaint does not explain why the woman refuses to leave. Her name has not been made public. Whether she has a lawyer is unknown. The court and specific legal statute cited in the filing are also unclear from available reporting.
The New York Post noted that TMH asked a state judge for the injunction, underscoring that the hospital exhausted its internal options before turning to the courts.
Hospitals operate under strict federal rules about patient discharge. They cannot simply wheel someone to the curb. Those protections exist for good reason, but they also create perverse incentives. When a discharged patient refuses every reasonable offer of help, the hospital absorbs the cost while sick people wait.
TMH tried coordination, transportation, and family outreach. Five months of patience earned it a lawsuit it had to file against someone occupying its own property.
The March 30 hearing will determine whether a judge grants the injunction. If the court sides with TMH, the Leon County Sheriff’s Office could be called in to enforce the order.
No interim ruling has been reported. The woman’s side of the story remains unheard in public filings covered so far.
When a hospital has to sue to use its own bed, the system isn’t protecting patients, it’s protecting dysfunction.
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