Miami Herald

Owner of five hospitals in South Florida files for bankruptcy. Will it affect you?

- BY MICHELLE MARCHANTE mmarchante@miamiheral­d.com

Steward Health Care — the largest physiciano­wned healthcare network in the U.S., with hospitals across the country and in Florida — has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Steward, which owns Palmetto General Hospital in Hialeah and North Shore Medical Center in North Miami-Dade, filed for bankruptcy protection Monday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas.

The Dallas-based company, which was founded by Florida’s Dr. Ralph de la Torre, promised in a statement that patient care will not be affected during the bankruptcy process.

Steward Health Care operates eight hospitals in Florida and five are in South Florida:

Palmetto General Hospital, 2001 W 68 St., Hialeah

Coral Gables Hospital, 3100 Douglas Road

Hialeah Hospital, 651 E 25th St.

North Shore Medical Center, 1100 NW 95th St., North Miami-Dade

Florida Medical Center, 5000 W. Oakland Park Blvd., Lauderdale Lakes

Steward bought the South Florida hospitals from Tenet Healthcare for $1.1 billion in 2021. Steward’s other Florida hospitals are Melbourne Regional Medical Center, Rockledge Regional Center and Sebastian River Medical Center.

WHAT DOES THE BANKRUPTCY MEAN?

Steward, which reportedly has more than $1 billion in debt, filed for bankruptcy protection under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code's Chapter 11, which lets businesses reorganize their debts while continuing to operate.

The company said it’s in the process of negotiatin­g terms in court for a loan from Medical Trust Properties, the landlord that owns all of Steward’s real estate, for “initial funding of $75 million and up to an additional $225 million.”

Steward’s hospitals and medical centers will remain open and doctors can keep caring for patients during the bankruptcy process. The bankruptcy process generally takes between six months and two years, though some cases can last more than five years, according to Debt.org

“The bankruptcy declaratio­n should only embolden the administra­tion, the Legislatur­e, the healthcare industry, and all those who value the health of our communitie­s to immediatel­y take whatever steps are needed to ensure the preservati­on of these facilities and the safe transition to more stable and responsibl­e not for profit ownership,” read a joint statement by 1199SEIU, United Healthcare Workers East with the Minnesota Nurses Associatio­n.

1199SEIU is a union that represents more than 450,000 healthcare workers in the country. Its Florida chapter has more than 25,000 healthcare employees in hospitals and nursing homes.

Will Steward Health bankruptcy affect patient care?

Steward, which has more than 30 hospitals in the country, said it doesn’t expect the bankruptcy process to affect “day-today operations.”

“Steward’s hospitals, medical centers and physician’s offices are open and continuing to serve patients and the broader community and our commitment to our employees will not change,” Steward said.

However, it’s too soon to say what will happen to Steward’s hospitals and medical centers when the bankruptcy process is over, according to John McDonough, who is a professor of the practice of public health at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and has kept tabs on the Steward Health

Care saga.

When asked about what might happen to Steward’s Florida hospitals, McDonough, speaking generally about how bankruptcy tends to work for healthcare systems, said it’s possible some hospitals will be sold to another investor that wants to continue offering healthcare services. Hospitals could also be sold and converted to another type of business or be sold for their land and torn down for developmen­t.

“It’s really too early to say what might be the result,” McDonough said. “And generally speaking, the facilities that cater to underserve­d population­s tend to become the most vulnerable in these circumstan­ces.”

Hialeah Mayor Esteban Bovo, in a written statement, said the city will monitor developmen­ts to ensure patients have continuity of care.

“I have been in communicat­ion with the Hospitals’ leadership, and would like to assure the residents of the City of Hialeah that the service at both Hialeah and Palmetto hospitals will not be affected as a result of the bankruptcy action,” Bovo said.

WHAT LED STEWARD HEALTH CARE TO BANKRUPTCY?

Steward CEO de la Torre said the hospital system had recently taken steps to help stabilize operations. Those measures include securing “bridge financing,” which is a short-term loan, and selling its nationwide physician network to Optum, a subsidiary of United HealthGrou­p

In a written statement, de la Torre said the company decided to declare bankruptcy due to costs and the delay in finalizing the sale of its physician network.

He also blamed decreasing and “insufficie­nt” reimbursem­ent rates by Medicare and Medicaid, “skyrocketi­ng labor costs, increased material and operationa­l costs due to inflation, and the continued impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Here some key things to know from McDonough, the Harvard expert:

In 2016, Steward sold all its real estate — buildings and land, including its Florida hospitals — for $1.25 billion to Medical Trust Properties, which

The Wall Street Journal says is one of the largest U.S. hospital landlords in the country.

While Steward was still running the operations, its hospitals now had to pay rent to Medical Trust Properties to operate on the same property that Steward once owned. Steward used the profits it got to buy more hospitals, according to McDonough.

As Steward’s money problems worsened, so did the conditions of its hospitals and ability to care for patients, with reports of delays in payments to workers and vendors, job losses, insufficie­nt supplies and broken equipment at some places.

Steward’s financial crisis, the lavish lifestyle of its CEO, and its more-thandecade-old refusal to provide financial informatio­n to Massachuse­tts, as is required by state law, eventually drew the eyes of Massachuse­tts government officials, including U.S.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

Bottom line: Steward’s owners were more focused on making a profit quickly, and the debt caught up to them, according to McDonough. “They felt they had no choice but to sell themselves out to Wall Street and people who rely on these facilities are now paying the price or will pay the price.”

Michelle Marchante: 305-376-2708, @TweetMiche­lleM

 ?? ?? Steward Health Care filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Monday.
Steward Health Care filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Monday.

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