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TIME: Almanac 1995
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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>