Connecticut Post (Sunday)

‘Lead with your heart as much as your head’

Marna Borgstrom retires as CEO of Yale New Haven Health System

- By Ed Stannard A pandemic edward.stannard @hearstmedi­act.com; 203-680-9382

NEW HAVEN — Marna Borgstrom has overseen a major expansion of the Yale New Haven Health System since she was named CEO in 2005, with five hospitals spanning the shoreline from Greenwich to Westerly, R.I.

Borgstrom’s strengths a health care executive, however, come not just from her experience since she began as an administra­tive resident in 1978. They are rooted in her ability to relate to her staff and patients with genuine warmth, and to support others along the way, say those who have worked with her.

The influences she has had stretch far beyond New Haven. Valerie Powell-Stafford was an administra­tive fellow in 1990 at Yale New Haven. Now she is CEO of Northside

Hospital in St. Petersburg, Fla.

“Marna was this great role model for me, and I still reflect upon what I learned from her as a working mom as well,” Powell-Stafford said. “I would look at her in awe at how she was able to balance this very demanding career, as well as a family.”

Powell-Stafford said she has made the lessons Borgstrom taught her a part of her life and leadership. One is not to bring the concerns of work home, but to devote home life to family. Also, “she did a great job at listening and making sure that all the appropriat­e stakeholde­rs were at the table when important decisions were made,” Powell-Stafford said.

And Powell-Stafford said she has followed Borgstrom in supporting other women in the health care field. “She’s done a great job in promoting women in particular … and making sure we have opportunit­ies,” she said. “That’s something I’m very intentiona­l of as well.”

Borgstrom, 67, announced Sept. 15 that she will retire on March 25, 2022, 43 years after she joined the hospital, planning to stay for a short time before moving back to the West Coast, where she, her husband, Eric, and their sons, Christophe­r and Peter, lived.

Her successor, Christophe­r O’Connor, like Borgstrom chosen from within Yale New Haven Health’s executive ranks, will be only its fourth CEO since 1976.

When James Rawlings worked at Yale New Haven Hospital as assistant vice president for community health, and the hospital was a tenth of the size it is now, with fewer than 4,000 staff, “She could tell you almost every employee’s name as she walked down the hallways,” he said.

Borgstrom’s ability to connect personally wasn’t confined to her co-workers, either, Rawlings said. “She could walk in every community,” including the heavily Black neighborho­ods in the Hill area around the hospital. “She had that magnetism, that gravitas,” he said.

Borgstrom was born in Baltimore and grew up in Connecticu­t. Eric Borgstrom is from north of Seattle, “and we both always thought that we would love to live there,” Borgstrom said. “But you know, one thing led to another and I just kept having new opportunit­ies. And I never did the same thing for more than a couple of years.”

But while she would have found the same challenges in another setting, she said, “there’s something very important about working with a team of people who you feel like you can get work done with.”

So when Joseph Zaccagnino retired early, at age 59, Borgstrom became what she calls “the accidental CEO.”

“I realized that, if I didn’t throw my hat in the ring, I would probably have to look for another role, because somebody new would come in and they would build their own team,” she said. Friday was her 16th anniversar­y as CEO.

Once she rose to the health system’s leadership, “she didn’t sit in the chair; she transforme­d the chair,” said former Mayor John DeStefano Jr. One of the ways was how she improved the relationsh­ip between the hospital and Yale University. Yale New Haven is the primary teaching hospital for the Yale School of Medicine.

“Marna was part of creating a much healthier relationsh­ip. … She worked at it. I think it was a goal,” DeStefano said.

Research and jobs

Borgstrom said the partnershi­p with Yale is one of the strengths of the health system. “The deans of the medical school have been good enough to include me and members of our team in a lot of their leadership meetings,” she said. “I know not just the clinical leaders who we support, but I know basic science chairs and the researchte­aching-clinical care community is very integrated at Yale, more so than other places.”

Dr. Nancy Brown, dean of Yale Medical School, wrote in an email, “Marna has consistent­ly supported graduate medical education. She has led a drive for standardiz­ed excellence across the system. She has also articulate­d a vision for greater alignment between the medical school and health system, one we are poised to realize.”

She added, “The creation and growth of Smilow Cancer Hospital has allowed us to deliver cutting-edge cancer care to patients across the state of Connecticu­t.”

As one of the two largest employers in New Haven, along with Yale, Yale New Haven is critical to the city, but also attracts related businesses. “Our new factories don’t make guns. They create jobs and private sector businesses in New Haven,” including pharmaceut­ical companies and medical device manufactur­ers, DeStefano said.

“The neurology center on the St. Raphael campus is going to be meaningful not only for patient care and for research but for the economic benefit of the city,” he said.

DeStefano said he and Borgstrom did have difference­s. “There were times the city had issues with collection procedures … and had issues about unionizati­on of the workforce,” he said. “That said, on balance the community worked through those issues and continues to work through those issues.”

Only food service workers are unionized at Yale New Haven Hospital’s two campuses.

Borgstrom and her decades of experience were tested when COVID-19 hit Connecticu­t in March 2020. She remembered a town hall on Zoom with 8,500 employees, “trying to reassure them.”

“One of the things COVID did was, it tested our ability as a reasonably large organizati­on to pivot. And we pivoted magnificen­tly well,” she said.

“Greenwich was the first hospital” to have a high number of COVID patients, Borgstrom said. “They were overrun. At one point Greenwich wasn’t doing anything except COVID and well-newborn deliveries, and those were terrifying. And it’s a relatively small hospital and they were under siege. And what we were able to do as a system is we moved: If they needed nurses, if they needed computers, if they needed respirator­s, we moved them from New London, we moved them from Bridgeport, we moved them from New Haven and it was real time. … We created an incident command group who managed and made real-time decisions and … I can’t think of a bad decision that was made.”

Borgstrom’s response went beyond Yale New Haven Health. When she received a Friday evening call in April 2020 from Kathleen Silard, CEO of independen­t Stamford Hospital, saying she didn’t know whether she’d have enough ventilator­s and other equipment to make it through the weekend. “I said, you know, Kath, I’ll get back to you, but we will figure out how to treat you as if you’re a member of the Yale New Haven Health System,” Borgstrom said.

By 10 p.m., a plan had been worked out with Bridgeport Hospital, St. Vincent’s Hospital, the ambulance companies and others. “What they did in a matter of a couple of hours was, they load balanced so that we never hit a crisis in any of the Connecticu­t hospitals that weekend or during the pandemic for that matter,” Borgstrom said.

Gov. Ned Lamont named Borgstrom, Hartford HealthCare CEO Jeffrey Flaks and Nuvance Health CEO John Murphy to lead the health system response team when COVID hit. “I found her to be an exceptiona­l partner,” said Flaks, who began his career as an intern at Yale New Haven Hospital in 1992.

“I consider Marna a role model, an incredible valuesdriv­en principled leader,” Flaks said. “She’s a consummate profession­al and Marna is honorable to her core, and I believe she’s a very special and unique leader.”

Flaks said, “When we were responding to the unknown, when there was tremendous uncertaint­y, she has great wisdom, and she remains thoughtful and curious, and I found her to be a tremendous thought partner. She was so steady and she was so purposeful and always focused on the betterment of what was right for the community.”

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