Modern Healthcare

BJC, Saint Luke’s of Kansas City merger to close soon

- ALEX KACIK

BJC HealthCare and Saint Luke’s Health System of Kansas City have signed a definitive merger agreement and plan to close the proposed transactio­n Jan. 1, the nonprofit health systems said last week.

BJC and Saint Luke’s executives said they have received all regulatory approvals. There are no state regulatory requiremen­ts, but the organizati­ons have kept state officials informed throughout the process, executives said. The two systems signed a letter of intent in May.

The combined system would have roughly $10 billion in revenue and 28 hospitals across Missouri, southern Illinois and eastern Kansas. Each health system would maintain their respective brands and operate from dual headquarte­rs—St. Louis, where BJC is based, and Kansas City, Missouri.

Richard Liekweg, BJC president and CEO, would lead the combined organizati­on. Before the two systems announced their plans, Saint Luke’s CEO Dr. Melinda Estes had planned to retire by year’s end. The board would comprise representa­tives from both organizati­ons.

Like many other regional health systems that are pursuing or have completed mergers, Liekweg and Estes said their organizati­ons together can more effectivel­y cut costs and improve care.

“The headwinds in our industry are strong as we face a number of issues— capacity, workforce, payment, supply chain shortages,” Estes said. “As our industry pivots, I believe that we will be able to create greater efficienci­es through scale and continue to provide excellent levels of patient care.”

The merger would allow the combined health system to boost investment in treatment, expand recruitmen­t efforts, add locations, bolster research and improve population health initiative­s, executives said.

For the first nine months of 2023, BJC reported operating income of $113.2 million on operating revenue of $5.17 billion, compared with operating income of $3.1 million on operating revenue of $4.65 billion in the year-ago period. Saint Luke’s reported operating income of $8.4 million on revenue of $1.85 billion, up from an operating loss of $14.2 million on revenue of $1.75 billion through the first nine months of 2022.

While the organizati­ons are still mapping out the integratio­n process, much of the focus will be on nonclinica­l, administra­tive areas, such as the electronic health record and IT management, Liekweg said. The systems operate on two different versions of Epic, he said.

“This would give us the scale to continue to innovate and invest in data analytics, allowing us as a large, integrated academic health system to bring discovery into the clinical environmen­t faster,” Liekweg said.

Many executives claim that overhead associated with a hospital’s real estate footprint, EHR and equipment decreases as those expenses are spread over a bigger organizati­on. But a Modern Healthcare analysis of health system mergers shows that growth does not always lead to lower costs.

A number of other Midwest health systems aim to test that hypothesis, and potentiall­y improve their negotiatin­g leverage with commercial insurers, as they pursue mergers and acquisitio­ns. Detroit-based Henry Ford Health and the Michigan division of St. Louis-based Ascension announced plans to combine in October. That month, Wausau, Wisconsin-based Aspirus Health and St. Luke’s Duluth (Minnesota) signed a definitive acquisitio­n agreement. Milwaukee-based Froedtert Health and Neenah, Wisconsin-based ThedaCare signed a definitive merger

n agreement in September.

 ?? SAINT LUKE’S HEALTH SYSTEM OF KANSAS CITY ?? Richard Liekweg, BJC HealthCare president and CEO, and Dr. Melinda Estes, Saint Luke’s Health System of Kansas City CEO, sign a definitive merger agreement.
SAINT LUKE’S HEALTH SYSTEM OF KANSAS CITY Richard Liekweg, BJC HealthCare president and CEO, and Dr. Melinda Estes, Saint Luke’s Health System of Kansas City CEO, sign a definitive merger agreement.

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