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- <text id=94TT0308>
- <title>
- Mar. 21, 1994: Wanted:Slightly Used Hospitals
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 58
- Wanted:Slightly Used Hospitals
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the new era of medical-cost cutting, a health-care entrepreneur
- builds an empire based on efficiency
- </p>
- <p>By Janice Castro
- </p>
- <p> Rick Scott remembers the first time he offered to buy HCA,
- the Hospital Corp. of America, based in Nashville, Tennessee.
- He offered $5 billion. Scott, then a 34-year-old Fort Worth,
- Texas, lawyer, had $125,000 in the bank. They laughed, he recalls
- fondly. "One guy in Dallas said, `What are you going to do,
- Rick? Put it on your MasterCard?'"
- </p>
- <p> A few months later in 1987, Scott quit his law-firm job, founded
- a company he called Columbia Hospital Corp. and started to buy
- individual hospitals for a living. Within five years, he and
- his investment partners raised enough money to buy 38 of them,
- scattered from El Paso, Texas, to Miami, acquiring along the
- way an enviable reputation for delivering high-quality care
- with low operating costs. Last September, in a $4.3 billion
- deal, he took over the 71 Humana hospitals. Last month, with
- particular satisfaction, Scott changed the name of his firm
- to Columbia/HCA Healthcare, having just completed an $8 billion
- merger with his original, elusive target. In so doing he added
- HCA's 95 hospitals to Columbia's sprawling, 26-state chain.
- </p>
- <p> In less than seven years, Scott has built the largest hospital
- firm in the country. Columbia now owns 197 hospitals and projects
- 1994 revenues of more than $11 billion. Scott's original $125,000
- investment is worth $266 million, and Columbia, based in Louisville,
- Kentucky, is still growing briskly in every region where it
- has gained a foothold. Within 10 years, Scott expects to own
- 500 hospitals. "But," he hastens to add, "we could have 1,000.
- It's possible. Nobody ever thought we'd get this far this soon."
- </p>
- <p> Even as Congress mulls ways to reform the $1 trillion American
- health-care system, the nation's health sector, through the
- likes of Rick Scott, is rapidly reforming itself. Health inflation,
- for example, has slowed dramatically. Medical costs rose just
- 5.3% last year, the smallest increase in 20 years--largely
- because enrollment in managed-care plans, which seek to curb
- wasteful treatment, is growing so quickly. More than half of
- all American workers are enrolled in such health plans, up from
- 27% in 1988. Most striking, more than a third of companies offering
- health benefits to their workers actually reduced their medical
- bills last year or saw no increases from the year before, according
- to a study by the Foster Higgins consulting firm. The competition
- to serve patients has become so intense that when Columbia,
- which operates 47 hospitals in Florida, bid on a contract to
- serve the public employees of Lee County, Florida, last fall,
- the chain had to offer a 40% discount to win the business.
- </p>
- <p> The pressure to hold down costs has brought about dramatic changes
- in the $360 billion hospital industry. In the old days (10 years
- ago), insurance companies and Medicaid and Medicare generally
- paid hospitals whatever they charged. Almost all of the more
- than 6,000 American hospitals were tax-exempt nonprofits with
- few incentives to curb their expenses. Now most hospital patients
- are insured by plans that demand discounts, limit payments and
- closely monitor care to see whether patients are spending too
- many days in the hospital or having too many tests. A wrenching
- shakeout is transforming the industry from a wasteful, overbuilt
- mess, which has left nonprofit hospitals $100 billion in debt,
- to a more efficient, cost-conscious business. On any given day,
- more than a third of all hospital beds in the U.S. are empty.
- Managed care and advances in medical treatment have helped shorten
- hospital stays and have shifted simple surgeries and other procedures
- into outpatient settings. Many hospitals have become obsolete.
- Every year 50 close their doors. Scott says that's not enough:
- "You could close 30% of the hospitals in this country today
- and nobody would miss them, as long as people could go to a
- good hospital nearby."
- </p>
- <p> Wastefulness is what drew Scott to the hospital industry in
- the first place. After studying the business as an attorney
- handling several hospital sales for clients, he was confident
- he could do a better job managing these institutions. One patented
- Scott method of making his hospitals more efficient is to buy
- an underused, competing hospital and shut it down, shifting
- the patients into his remaining facilities nearby. In 1988,
- shortly after buying his first two hospitals in El Paso, he
- asked his bank for an $11 million loan to buy a nearby hospital
- that was nearly empty. "They were serving only 50 patients a
- day and were already $11 million in debt. My bankers said I
- was crazy, borrowing money to close something down. I told them,
- look, if just 40 of those patients come to the hospital I have
- three blocks away, we'll take in $6 million a year in new revenues."
- </p>
- <p> He got his loan and his new patients. The underused hospital
- was converted to commercial office space; his two remaining
- El Paso facilities became more profitable. Says Scott: "Hospitals
- have high fixed expenses because of all the equipment and skilled
- professionals you need to run them. Any time you can make a
- hospital busier, you can increase your cash flow and reduce
- your average costs per patient while also improving quality.
- When you get sick, go to a busy hospital. That's the one that
- always has everything you need, from the specialists to the
- equipment, because it can afford them."
- </p>
- <p> Columbia has grown one city at a time, buying hospitals, then
- adding outpatient surgery centers, rehabilitation facilities,
- diagnostic testing labs and other health services in the surrounding
- communities. The strategy is vertical integration, a coordinated
- system to offer patients whatever they need, from X rays to
- transplants, in the setting that makes the most sense. By building
- substantial market share, Columbia has gained negotiating clout
- with its suppliers and contractors. Because the company buys
- $1.8 billion worth of hospital goods every year, for example,
- Columbia is able to demand deep discounts. Says John Hendelong,
- who follows the health-care sector for the Donaldson, Lufkin
- & Jenrette investment firm: "The Clinton Administration wants
- a more streamlined health-care system, and this is exactly what
- Columbia is building. They have been able to control costs without
- hurting quality." Columbia runs several teaching hospitals and
- research centers as well, including the University of Louisville,
- University of Chicago and University of Miami hospitals. At
- the Louisville facility, Columbia provides $40 million in charity
- care each year. The state reimburses $25 million; Columbia absorbs
- the remainder.
- </p>
- <p> Is Columbia getting too powerful? Some health experts are worried
- that its aggressive management of costs may eventually lead
- the company to cut corners on care. Scott has been criticized
- for allowing doctors who work in some of his hospitals to become
- part owners of the facilities. Critics say this practice sometimes
- gives doctors an improper incentive to hospitalize patients,
- since the physicians share in the company's profits. Robert
- O'Leary, chairman of American Medical International, a competing
- firm that runs 35 hospitals, maintains that the Columbia practice
- is highly questionable.
- </p>
- <p> Scott defends Columbia's strategy by noting that the doctors
- in question own less than 2% of the company. O'Leary's firm,
- meanwhile, engages in another controversial strategy: buying
- physician practices, which looks to some critics like a quid
- pro quo to encourage effectively franchised physicians to send
- their patients to AMI hospitals. Such arrangements have been
- investigated in some states. In most cases, the deals have been
- ruled legitimate if the doctor retires or leaves the practice
- within a year of selling it to the firm. Still, the possibility
- lingers that doctors associated with both firms may occasionally
- have a conflict of interest when it comes to deciding on the
- best way to treat patients.
- </p>
- <p> One way or another, though, hospitals must become more efficient,
- as demand for medical services threatens to overwhelm the resources
- available to pay for them. Getting costs down is critical to
- maintaining quality treatment. Columbia's hospitals have done
- that more effectively than most others, and Scott believes the
- bigger his company gets, the better it can afford to provide
- cost-efficient care.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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