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Hospitals and health systems in multiple states caught up in midsummer spate of M&A activity

Aug 05, 2024

Last week brought a flurry of merger-and-acquisition activity. In Pennsylvania, two health systems combined, and CHS sold three of its hospitals to a new organization. Ascension agreed to sell several of its hospitals in the Chicago area. Other transactions involved providers in Tennessee and Virginia. And there was more news on Steward’s hospitals in Massachusetts.

Here are the details.

Philadelphia-based Jefferson Health officially combined with Lehigh Valley Health Network (LVHN), forming an integrated academic healthcare delivery system with 32 hospitals, more than 700 sites of care, more than 65,000 employees, a doctoral research university, and an expanded health plan.

The two organizations signed a letter of intent to combine in December and completed the transaction on Aug. 1. The combined entity is among the top 15 not-for-profit health systems in the U.S., according to the news release. It serves patients in eastern Pennsylvania and southern New Jersey.

Jefferson Health’s CEO, Dr. Joseph Cacchione, is the CEO of the newly combined health system. Dr. Brian Nester, who served as CEO of LVHN, is now executive vice president/chief operating officer of the combined system and has oversight of the legacy LVHN. Dr. Baligh Yehia is president of the legacy Jefferson Health and executive vice president/chief transformation officer of the combined entity.

St. Louis-based Ascension entered into an asset purchase agreement to sell nine of its hospitals in Illinois, as well as four associated sites of care, to Ontario, Calif.-based Prime Healthcare. Ascension would still have 12 hospitals and care facilities in Illinois, a spokesperson told Healthcare Dive.

Prime Healthcare has committed to investing $250 million to upgrade and improve the facilities as part of the agreement, according to the announcement. If the transaction is finalized, it will be Prime Healthcare’s largest acquisition to date.

Currently, Prime Healthcare has 44 hospitals, more than 300 outpatient locations, and nearly 45,000 employees and affiliated physicians across 14 states. The health system also has a 501(c)(3) charity, Prime Healthcare Foundation.

Ascension and Prime Healthcare anticipate completing the transaction in the first quarter of next year if they receive regulatory approval. Under the agreement, eight of the hospitals would become for-profit entities, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. Ascension St. Francis in Evanston would remain a nonprofit as part of PrimeHealthcare Foundation.

Subsidiaries of Franklin, Tenn.-based, Community Health Systems entered into a definitive agreement on July 31 to sell CHS’ remaining three hospitals in Pennsylvania, along with the hospitals’ affiliated facilities and a physician network — collectively known as Commonwealth Health — to WoodBridge Healthcare for $120 million.

WoodBridge Healthcare is a recently established not-for-profit organization based in New Hope, Pa. CHS is a for-profit health system. Woodbridge said Commonwealth Health will revert to its original nonprofit status when the purchase is completed, PA Homepage reported. The sale is expected to close in the fourth quarter, according to the news release.

On Aug. 1, CHS subsidiaries completed the sale of a Tennessee hospital — Tennova Healthcare-Cleveland — and the hospital’s related businesses to Dalton, Ga.-based Vitruvian Health for $160 million. Vitruvian Health was previously named Hamilton Healthcare System.

CHS subsidiaries still own or lease 70 affiliated hospitals and operate more than 1,000 sites of care. On a July 25 earnings call, CHS executives reaffirmed the plan revealed in February to divest $1 billion worth of assets this year. Proceeds will be used to pay down CHS’ debts.

A decade ago, CHS was the largest for-profit hospital company in the U.S., with more than 200 hospitals.

Charlottesville, Va.-based UVA Health completed its acquisition of Piedmont Family Practice, a family medicine clinic based in Warrenton, Va., on July 31.  The practice has about 90 team members, who have transitioned to UVA Health’s community medical group, according to the announcement.

Dallas-based Steward Health will be allowed to close two of the eight hospitals it operates in Massachusetts — Carney Hospital in Boston and Nashoba Valley Medical Center in Ayer — by the end of this month.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez, who is overseeing Steward’s bankruptcy case, said in a hearing on July 31 that, based on the evidence he had seen, keeping the hospitals open “threatens the entire hospital system in Massachusetts.”

The judge noted that Steward is experiencing “an incredible amount of loss” weekly and has not secured funding that would keep its assets afloat much longer, Becker’s Hospital Review reported.

Although Steward has been seeking buyers for the Massachusetts hospitals, neither of the two slated for closure has received an actionable bid, Steward representative David Cohen said during the hearing. An attorney for the commonwealth told the judge that state officials had been preparing for the potential closures and would work with Steward to relocate the hospitals’ patients “into safe facilities.”

Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healy’s administration offered $30 million in advance Medicaid payments to help Stewards’ hospitals in the state stay open through the end of this month, according to Becker’s, but the offer is contingent on Steward signing sales agreements for the rest of its hospitals.

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