Miami Herald

Is your Miami hospital up for sale? What these next steps mean for patients and care

- BY MICHELLE MARCHANTE mmarchante@miamiheral­d.com

Palmetto General,

North Shore Medical Center, Coral Gables Hospital and other South Florida hospitals are up for sale, part of owner Steward Health Care System’s plan to thin debt through Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

And the future of the hospitals — and what it will mean for patients and employees — could be decided this month.

The bid deadline is Monday for buyers interested in Steward Health’s Florida hospitals, with an auction set for next Wednesday and a court hearing to finalize the sales on Aug. 22, court records show.

In South Florida, the hospitals for sale are Palmetto General Hospital in Hialeah, Coral Gables Hospital, Hialeah Hospital, North Shore Medical Center in Miami-Dade and Florida Medical Center in Lauderdale Lakes. Other Florida hospitals on the market are Melbourne Regional Medical Center, Rockledge Regional Medical Center and Sebastian River Medical.

All of the hospitals remain open.

Steward Health has moved quickly to sell all 31 of its U.S. hospitals since filing for bankruptcy protection in May, though it has previously delayed bid deadlines and sale hearings for its hospitals and physician group. The initial bid deadline for its Florida hospitals was originally in late July.

Steward Health has previously indicated that it wants to emerge from bankruptcy as a more stable company focused on its Florida market. But first, it needs to reduce debt.

As of Monday, the bid deadline for its Florida hospitals appeared to be on track.

Here’s what the possible hospital sales could mean for patients and employees:

WHAT HAPPENS IF STEWARD HEALTH SELLS ITS FLORIDA HOSPITALS?

What happens to Steward’s hospitals depends on whether the company can find a buyer, and if so, what the buyer wants to do with the properties.

It’s possible Steward’s Florida hospitals will be sold to investors that want to continue offering healthcare. Hospitals could also be sold and converted to another type of business or be sold for their land and torn down for developmen­t, according to John McDonough, a professor of the practice of public health at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. McDonough has kept tabs on the Steward Health Care saga and spoke generally about how bankruptcy tends to work for healthcare systems during a recent interview with the Miami Herald.

“The facilities that cater to underserve­d population­s tend to become the most vulnerable in these circumstan­ces,” McDonough said.

WHAT HAPPENS IF STEWARD HEALTH CAN’T SELL ALL OF ITS FLORIDA HOSPITALS?

If Steward Health can’t sell all of its Florida hospitals, the company could ask the court for more time to find buyers or to let it keep operating the unsold hospitals. Attorneys for the for-profit health system have previously said in court that Steward’s Florida hospitals were the “most profitable” in its portfolio.

“It’s been our stated goal since our initial filing to emerge from Chapter 11 as a smaller but stronger version of Steward, with our business centered around our Florida systems,” Steward Health previously told the Miami Herald in an emailed statement.

Steward Health could also decide to close unsold hospitals, some in Massachuse­tts. The healthcare system recently announced that it will be closing two Massachuse­tts hospitals after failing to find buyers with “qualified bids” for the facilities, with more than 1,200 layoffs expected. The company found buyers for its other Massachuse­tts hospitals, but the sales were delayed due to a dispute between Steward Health and landlords Medical Properties Trust and Macquarie Asset Management, Reuters reported.

The health giant’s hospital sales are happening while it undergoes a federal investigat­ion for possible corruption. And its CEO

Dr. Ralph de la Torre is in the hot seat. A congressio­nal committee recently voted to subpoena the CEO to get him in front of Congress in September to testify about the health giant’s financial situation.

Michelle Marchante: 305-376-2708, @TweetMiche­lleM

 ?? Miami Herald staff ?? Steward Health operates five hospitals in South Florida. The future of the hospitals — and what it will mean for patients and employees — could be decided this month.
Miami Herald staff Steward Health operates five hospitals in South Florida. The future of the hospitals — and what it will mean for patients and employees — could be decided this month.

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