The Mercury News

Wealthiest hospitals got billions in bailout intended for struggling health providers

- By Jesse Drucker, Jessica SilverGree­nberg and Sarah Kliff

A multibilli­on-dollar institutio­n in the Seattle area invests in hedge funds, runs a pair of venture capital funds and works with elite private equity firms like the Carlyle Group.

But it is not just another deep-pocketed investor hunting for high returns. It is the Providence Health System, one of the country’s largest and richest hospital chains. It is sitting on nearly $12 billion in cash, which it invests, Wall Street-style, in a good year generating more than $1 billion in profits.

And this spring, Providence received at least $509 million in government funds, one of many wealthy beneficiar­ies of a federal program that is supposed to prevent health care providers from capsizing during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

With states restrictin­g hospitals from performing elective surgery and other nonessenti­al services, their revenue has shriveled. The Department of Health and Human Services has disbursed $72 billion in grants since April to hospitals and other health care providers through the bailout program, which was part of the coronaviru­s economic stimulus package. The department plans to eventually distribute more than $100 billion more.

So far, the riches are flowing in large part to hospitals that had already built up deep financial reserves to help them withstand an economic storm. Smaller, poorer hospitals are receiving tiny amounts of federal aid by comparison.

Twenty large recipients, including Providence, have received a total of more than $5 billion in recent weeks, according to an analysis of federal data by Good Jobs First, a research group. Those hospital chains were already sitting on more than $108 billion in cash, according to regulatory filings and the bond-rating firms S&P Global and Fitch. A Providence spokeswoma­n said the grants helped make up for losses from the coronaviru­s.

Those cash piles come from a mix of sources: nostrings-attached private donations, income from investment­s with hedge funds and private equity firms, and any profits from treating patients. Some chains, like Providence, also run their own venture capital firms to invest their cash in cutting-edge startups. The investment portfolios often generate billions of dollars in annual profits, dwarfing what the hospitals earn from serving patients.

Many of these hospital groups, including Providence, are set up as nonprofits, which generally don’t have to pay federal taxes on their billions of dollars of income.

By contrast, hospitals that serve low-income patients often have only enough cash on hand to finance a few weeks of their operations.

After the coronaviru­s stimulus package was passed in March, hospital industry lobbyists reached out to senior Health and Human Services officials to discuss how the money would be distribute­d.

Representa­tives of the American Hospital Associatio­n, a lobbying group for the country’s largest hospitals, communicat­ed with Alex Azar, the department secretary, and Eric Hargan, the deputy secretary overseeing the funds, said Tom Nickels, a lobbyist for the group. Chip Kahn, president of the Federation of American Hospitals, which lobbies on behalf of for-profit hospitals, said he, too, had frequent discussion­s with the agency.

The department then devised formulas to quickly dispense tens of billions of dollars to thousands of hospitals and those formulas favored large, wealthy institutio­ns.

One formula based allotments on how much money a hospital collected from Medicare last year. Another was based on a hospital’s revenue. While Health and Human Services also created separate pots of funding for rural hospitals and those hit especially hard by the coronaviru­s, the department did not take into account each hospital’s existing financial resources.

“This simple formula used the data we had on hand at that time to get relief funds to the largest number of health care facilities and providers as quickly as possible,” said Caitlin B. Oakley, a spokeswoma­n for the department. “While other approaches were considered, these would have taken much longer to implement.”

Hospitals that serve a greater proportion of wealthier, privately insured patients got twice as much relief as those focused on low-income patients with Medicaid or no coverage at all, according to a study this month by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

“If you ever hear a hospital complainin­g they don’t have enough money, see if they have a venture fund,” said Niall Brennan, president of the nonprofit Health Care Cost Institute and a former senior Medicare official. “If you’ve got play money, you’re fine.”

In a letter this month to the Department of Health and Human Services, two House committee chairmen said the Trump administra­tion appeared to be disregardi­ng Congress’ intent in how it was distributi­ng the aid.

“The level of funding appears to be completely disconnect­ed from need,” wrote the two Democrats, Reps. Frank Pallone Jr. of New Jersey and Richard E. Neal of Massachuse­tts.

It is the latest instance in which enormous and hastily enacted federal bailout programs have benefited those who don’t appear to need the money. A package of $170 billion in federal tax breaks, for example, will go overwhelmi­ngly to many of the country’s richest people and biggest companies. A program to rescue small businesses initially directed hundreds of millions of dollars in loans to publicly traded companies while many smaller firms were frozen out.

That pattern is repeating in the hospital rescue program.

Critics argue that hospitals with vast financial resources should not be getting federal funds.

“If you accumulate­d $18 billion and you are a notfor-profit hospital system, what’s it for if other than a reserve for an emergency?” said Dr. Robert Berenson, a physician and a health policy analyst for the Urban Institute, a Washington research group.

Hospitals that serve poorer patients typically have thinner reserves to draw on.

Even before the coronaviru­s, roughly 400 hospitals in rural America were at risk of closing, said Alan Morgan, chief executive of the National Rural Hospital Associatio­n. On average, the country’s 2,000 rural hospitals had enough cash to keep their doors open for 30 days.

Many hospitals that primarily serve low-income people have received federal grants that their executives say may not be enough to see them through the current crisis.

At St. Claire HealthCare, the largest rural hospital system in eastern Kentucky, the number of surgeries dropped 88% during the pandemic depriving the hospital of a crucial revenue source. Looking to stanch the financial damage, it furloughed employees and canceled some vendor contracts. The $3 million the hospital received from the federal government in April will cover two weeks of payroll, said Donald H. Lloyd II, the health system’s chief executive.

“This is just a Band-Aid,” Lloyd said.

 ?? RUTH FREMSON — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Providence Health System offices, in downtown Seattle, runs two venture capital funds. It received at least $509 million in government funds during the pandemic.
RUTH FREMSON — THE NEW YORK TIMES Providence Health System offices, in downtown Seattle, runs two venture capital funds. It received at least $509 million in government funds during the pandemic.
 ?? DUSTIN FRANZ — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, has $7 billion in cash, yet it received $199 million in bailout funds.
DUSTIN FRANZ — THE NEW YORK TIMES The Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, has $7 billion in cash, yet it received $199 million in bailout funds.

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