Steward Health Care System
Industry | Healthcare |
---|---|
Predecessor | Steward Health Care System |
Founded | 2010 |
Founder | Cerberus Capital Management |
Headquarters | Boston, US |
Area served | New England |
Key people | Ralph de la Torre,MD CEO/President |
Owner | Cerberus Capital Management |
Number of employees | 17,000 |
Website |
www |
Steward Health Care is the second largest healthcare system in New England. It was established when the Caritas Christi Health Care system was sold to the private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management in 2010; Cerberus converted Caritas to a for-profit company and renamed it Steward Health Care System.[1] Steward Health Care has 17,000 employees, over 2,000 hospital beds across 11 hospitals, and serves more than 150 communities.[1] Steward Health Care is led by CEO Ralph de la Torre, MD,[2] and located in Boston. The System is still owned by Cerberus Capital Management.[2]
In September 2016, The Boston Globe reported Steward Health Care System had made a deal to expand its operations. Steward lined up $1.25 billion from a real estate investment firm that will help the Boston-based company finance a national expansion, pay off debt, and return money to the private equity firm that bought it almost six years ago. Steward said Medical Properties Trust Inc. would buy all of its hospital properties for $1.2 billion and pay $50 million for a 5 percent equity stake in the company. Steward will lease the properties from MPT, based in Birmingham, Alabama. The deal is expected to close in the second quarter of the year.
In May 2017, Steward announced a proposed merger with Iasis Healthcare, headquartered in Franklin, Tennessee, making the private for-profit hospital operator the largest in the United States. The merger will make Steward the parent organization to 36 hospitals across 10 states, with revenues of nearly $8 billion.[3] The deal would need regulatory approval.
Business model
The System's business model is based on being a low-price leader in the provision of high quality care.[2] Consistent with this model, the System has taken steps to reduce the direction of surgical patients toward teaching hospitals in the Boston area.[2] The System has also worked with payers to negotiate patient group-oriented budget pricing.[2]
Hospitals
As of 2012, the largest of the hospitals in the Steward system is St. Elizabeth's Medical Center in terms of total patient volume (several other hospitals have equal or greater inpatient bed capacity).[2]
Hospital | Location | Bed count | Emergency Department | Founded | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
St. Elizabeth's Medical Center | Brighton | 252 | Yes | 1868 | Founded by Third Order of St. Francis. Steward's tertiary care center. |
Carney Hospital | Dorchester | 150 | Yes | 1863 | Founded by Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul and Andrew Carney. First Catholic hospital in New England. |
Good Samaritan Medical Center | Brockton | 267 | Yes | 1993 | Merger of Cardinal Cushing General Hospital and Goddard Memorial Hospital |
Holy Family Hospital | Methuen | 261 | Yes | 1950 | Formerly Bon Secours Hospital, founded by Sisters of Bon Secours. |
Norwood Hospital | Norwood | 264 | Yes | 1902 | Formerly Willett Cottage Hospital |
Saint Anne's Hospital | Fall River | 160 | Yes | 1906 | Founded by Dominican Sisters of the Presentation |
Holy Family Hospital at Haverhill | Haverhill | 122 | Yes | 1887 | Formerly Merrimack Valley Hospital and Hale Hospital |
Nashoba Valley Medical Center | Ayer | 57 | Yes | 1964 | Formerly Beth Israel Deaconess-Nashoba |
Quincy Medical Center | Quincy | 196[4] | Yes | 1890 | Closed |
Morton Hospital and Medical Center | Taunton | 152 | Yes | 1888 | Formerly Morton Hospital & Medical Center |
New England Sinai Hospital | Stoughton | 212 | No | NESH is a long-term post-acute rehab hospital. |
Other facilities
Non-acute Steward facilities which offer a variety of services include Steward Home Care and the Steward Medical Group.[1]
Quincy Medical Center
After years of multimillion-dollar losses and a rapidly declining patient population, Quincy Medical Center closed in December 2014.[5] In the wake of the hospital’s closure, Steward Health Care announced that it would transition its primary, specialty, and veterans[6] care to a network of local facilities.[7] The healthcare company also announced that it would continue to operate its emergency department at the Quincy Medical Center facility,[8] and that it would provide substantial employee assistance, severance, and job-placement services to Quincy Medical Center staff.[9]
Steward Health Care’s transition plan has received approval from the Massachusetts Department of Public Health and from the Massachusetts Attorney General.[10]
References
- 1 2 3 "Steward Health Care". Steward Health Care. Retrieved September 25, 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Liz Kowalczyk (September 17, 2012), "Steward hires away top surgeon from Mass. General", The Boston Globe, Business section, bostonglobe.com, retrieved September 25, 2012
- ↑ Dayal McCluskey, Priyanka (2017-05-19). "Steward Health Care merges with Tenn. hospital system". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2017-05-19.
- ↑
- ↑ https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/12/26/quincy-medical-center-closes-its-doors-midnight/tU9GOvwImj8n7S1qmz8goN/story.html
- ↑ http://weymouth.wickedlocal.com/article/20150112/News/150119313
- ↑ https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/11/06/steward-shut-down-quincy-medical-center-largest-massachusetts-hospital-closure-decade/bVl0qPstKwouQLMKQ3UJiI/story.html
- ↑ http://www.wcvb.com/health/steward-to-open-satellite-er-at-quincy-medical-center/30266462
- ↑ https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2015/01/14/coakley-requires-steward-maintain-quincy-emergency-room-for-one-year/IG9z474UkEAs6wkQ1qXqbN/story.html
- ↑ http://www.bizjournals.com/boston/blog/health-care/2015/01/steward-will-keep-quincy-medical-centers-er-open.html
See also
Further reading
Weisman, Robert (August 12, 2011). "Unions, hospitals face off". Boston Globe.