The Houston Chronicle reported how Memorial Hermann Healthcare System has reached a confidential agreement with the Houston Rockets, Comets, and Aeros to get more well-to-do patients. The article quoted the system's Chief Executive, Dan Wolterman, "we want to work with these fine organizations to increase our exposure to paying customers." A local "health care expert" noted, "people who go to Rockets games are rich. Those are corporate and season ticket-holders. They are older, they are well-heeled...."
The system will be the "official health care partner" of the teams, and will provide medical care to their athletes. How much the system will pay the team is confidential, although some local experts predicted it was worth more than $1 million.
The system's mission statement is: "Memorial Hermann Healthcare System is a not-for-profit, community-owned, health care system with spiritual values, dedicated to providing high quality health services in order to improve the health of the people in Southeast Texas."
But it looks like the system will go to some marketing lengths to get those "people in Southeast Texas" who are at least "paying customers," if not from "well-heeled" to "rich."
1 comment:
Oh no, I was not incredibly hard on Hermann. I have been a lot harder on some other institutions.
It's certainly true that big academic medical centers operate in a very tough environment. Underlying their problems is an irrational reimbursement system that rewards procedures, especially those developed more recently, regardless of their value to the patient, and short-changes "cognitive services," especially primary care. The rise of specialty hospitals that skim off patients with good insurance coverage certainly adds to that problem.
On the other hand, I haven't seen too many academic medical centers fighting these reimbursement rules very hard. (I don't know much about Hermann other than what I read in the media, so can't say if they have been different.) In fact, most big academic medical centers have embraced this trend. For a good history of this, see Kenneth M. Ludmerer's Time to Heal. (http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/HistoryOther/HistoryofMedicine/?ci=0195118375&view=usa)
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