Chicago Sun-Times

NORTHWESTE­RN MEDICINE GAINS APPROVAL TO MERGE WITH CENTEGRA

- BY KIM MIKUS Daily Herald

After more than two years of discussion, Centegra Health System and Northweste­rn Medicine have gained regulatory approval to merge on Sept. 1.

The affiliatio­n was approved by the governing boards of both the health care systems.

“Together with Centegra, Northweste­rn Medicine will explore opportunit­ies to expand and enhance clinical care offerings to patients in Northern Illinois,” Dean M. Harrison, president and CEO of Northweste­rn Memorial HealthCare, said in a statement Tuesday. “Our shared goal is to provide patients with greater access to breakthrou­gh treatments and specialize­d care, close to where they live and work.”

Centegra, based in Crystal Lake, has hospitals in Huntley, McHenry andWoodsto­ck.

Centegra joins Chicago’s academic health system anchored by Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital and affiliated with Northweste­rn University’s Feinberg School of Medicine.

“This partnershi­p will combine Centegra’s community- based care with Northweste­rn Medicine’s academic health- care expertise,” said Michael S. Eesley, CEO of Centegra Health System. “This will give our patients enhanced access to the highest level of care and will support our associates’ continued commitment to service excellence.”

Centegra Health System also has about 30 outpatient locations in McHenry and Kane counties. Centegra employs 3,700 associates, and its medical staff includes 175 employed and more than 600 independen­t providers.

The health system has been facing financial struggles. About a year ago, Centegra Health System began moving all acute inpatient care from Woodstock to hospitals in McHenry and Huntley.

Eesley said at the time that the repurposin­g of hospital beds was prompted by “a flattening of growth in the Woodstock market over the last couple of years.” He said the health care industry is evolving more toward outpatient care rather than inpatient treatment.

The move came after the health system lost roughly $ 40 million last fiscal year since opening its $ 233 million, 128- bed Centegra Hospital- Huntley two years ago.

Eesley attributed $ 10 million to $ 12 million of those losses to the Huntley hospital. Variables such as population declines and higher numbers ofMedicaid/ Medicare patients— up fromroughl­y 5 percent more than 10 years ago to about 14 percent — have contribute­d to the system’s losses, he had said.

Meanwhile, Northweste­rn has added several suburban hospitals to its footprint, including Central DuPage Hospital in Winfield, Delnor Community Hospital in Geneva and Lake Forest Hospital.

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