El Dorado News-Times

Time for checkup on performanc­e of health care execs

- Jeff Robbins Columnist

After the 2008 economic collapse, the U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommitt­ee on Investigat­ions launched a series of inquiries aimed at exposing the rot underlying the financial services industry. During one memorable hearing, then-Sen.

Carl Levin grilled Goldman

Sachs executives on their sale of investment products they knew to be dubious in order to increase their already eye-popping compensati­on. An exchange in which Levin used internal emails to show how Goldman Sachs officials sold products they knew to be “s—-ty deals” went viral.

Congress has a long history of conducting investigat­ions to shed light on sharp or shoddy practices and the handsome compensati­on packages granted to the executives responsibl­e for them. In 1933, a Senate committee investigat­ing the roots of the Great Depression called banker J.P. Morgan to testify about his own salary and the dishonest practices that made that salary possible, generating public support for remedial legislatio­n enacted during the New Deal.

The pandemic has exposed with new clarity the comparable rot that underlies the American health care system. Americans pay an estimated $4 trillion annually for health care, and the pandemic has unmasked a system that proved ill-equipped to cope with a major public health crisis while other countries could and did. The mind-boggling monies pouring into health care providers’ coffers somehow leaves tens of millions of Americans unable to afford the health care they need and one serious illness away from ruin.

Meantime, one lucky group of individual­s are health care CEOs, whose compensati­on packages often bear little relationsh­ip to the delivery of affordable health care and frequently are the product of incentives to overcharge and under-treat. For example, Boston is a mecca for not only health care but also executives’ compensati­on arrangemen­ts, even as health care costs explode. A recent survey of nonprofit hospitals showed that as of 2018, the last year when their IRS filings are available, the CEOs of the city’s 10 largest health care companies were paid salaries ranging from $1.7 million to $4.7 million. Dozens of other health care executives in Boston were paid similar amounts.

This does not include the appointmen­ts to health care company boards these CEOs are able to leverage for themselves by dint of their positions. These appointmen­ts pay handsomely, with stock grants and annual board fees over and above their compensati­on. They are hardly charitable in nature: The companies handing out the board seats seek hospital business, and they get it, in the form of participat­ion in programs paid for by patients; research and clinical arrangemen­ts; and other lucrative benefits. On their face, these relationsh­ips are either blatant conflicts of interest or provide the compelling appearance of them. “It smells,” Alan Sager, professor at Boston University’s School of Public Health, says of this mutual back-scratching. “We don’t know whether it is a mild stench or a revolting stench. The potential for conflicts of interest is there. It should be prohibited.”

But the conflicts of interest are not even the only problem. “High health care CEO salaries,” Sager says, “are like the froth on a toxic waste dump. It is visible on the surface, but it obscures what is even worse underneath.” Hospital executives are often given free rein to run enterprise­s whose mandate is to increase the bottom line. “They are going to do things that are profitable,” he says, and that tends to encourage procedures, billing and other conduct whose target is that bottom line. “What they frequently do,” says Sager, “is put their financial self-interest first.”

Whether it is examining potential conflicts of interest by health care executives, or strengthen­ing whistleblo­wer protection­s for health care personnel who report practices that are dishonest or jeopardize patient safety, Congress has a crucial role to play, and it is crucial that it play it. The new Congress that takes office in January should use its investigat­ive powers to shine a much-needed spotlight on America’s health care corporatio­ns, and on how they can better serve the patients who pay their executives’ remarkable salaries.

Jeff Robbins, a former assistant United States attorney and United States delegate to the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, was chief counsel for the minority of the United States Senate Permanent Subcommitt­ee on Investigat­ions. An attorney specializi­ng in the First Amendment, he is a longtime columnist for the Boston Herald, writing on politics, national security, human rights and the Mideast.

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