Showing posts with label Carolinas HealthCare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carolinas HealthCare. Show all posts

Sunday, February 07, 2016

The Rich (Hospital Managers) Get Richer - Carolinas Healthcare Raises Executive Compensation Once Again

It's that time of year again.  Carolinas Healthcare has made public its executive compensation, and once again, its CEO got a big raise, and many other executives made more than a million dollars. And once again, the CEO's raise exceeds the rate of inflation, and seems totally unrelated to how well the health system fulfilled its mission.

The History of Executive Compensation at Carolinas Healthcare

About a year ago, we noted that CEO Michael Tarwater got $5.3 million in total compensation.  In fact, we have been following his compensation since 2009 (see also posts in 2011, 2012, and 2013).  It started big, and got bigger.

- $3.4 million in 2009
- $3.7 million in 2010
- $4.2 million in 2011
- $4.76 million in 2012
- $4.9 million in 2013
- $5.3 million in 2014

The Latest Increases

Now the yearly update by Karen Garloch writing in the Charlotte Observer:

-$6.6 million in 2015

That is a 26% increase in one year, and an almost 100% increase since 2009, increases far greater than inflation.  The 2015 compensation broke down as follows:

In 2015, Tarwater received a salary of $1.28 million, two bonuses totaling $5 million, and other compensation, including retirement and health benefits of $305,318....

In contrast, the bonuses given to non-management personnel by the system were orders of magnitude smaller:

Among nonmanagement employees, more than 22,000 in Carolinas HealthCare’s Charlotte-area hospitals received 2015 incentive bonuses of $1,000 each, and 7,674 others received bonuses of $300 or $600 each, Moore said. Another “special bonus” program benefited about 24,000 employees, who received $1,000 each, and 7,568 others, who got $300 or $600 each. Total bonuses for nonmanagement employees came to $53.4 million, in addition to annual pay raises that averaged 2 percent.

Although that total sounds large in isolation, consider that one person, the CEO, got a bonus equal to one-tenth of all the bonuses given to over 24,000 other employees.

Other top executives also did very well for themselves.  

▪ Joseph Piemont, former chief operating officer: $3,200,326
▪ Greg Gombar, chief financial officer: $2, 334,150
▪ Terrence Akin, CEO of Cone Health: $1,964,482
▪ Dr. Roger Ray, chief physician executive: $1,957,065
▪ John Knox, chief administrative officer: $1,507,984
▪ Paul Franz, executive vice president: $1,500,245
▪ Dennis Phillips, executive vice president: $1,400,487
▪ Keith Smith, general counsel: $1,317,919
▪ Debra Plousha Moore, chief human resources officer: $1,306,477

CHS hospital presidents - 2015
▪ Phyllis Wingate, president, CHS NorthEast: $1,045,784
 ▪ Spencer Lilly, president, Carolinas Medical Center: $868,610
▪ Christopher Hummer, president, CHS Pineville: $711,685
▪ Michael Lutes, president, CHS Union: $690,719
▪ Brian Gwyn, president, CHS Cleveland: $664,034
▪ William Leonard, president, CHS University: $530,493
▪ Peter Acker, president, CHS Lincoln: $475,758
▪ Alfred Taylor, president, Stanly Regional Medical Center: $455,665
▪ Robert Larrison, president, Carolinas Rehabilitation: $407,503
The Usual Talking Points for Justification

Hospital management used the usual talking points to justify the pay they received,  As I wrote last year 
It seems nearly every attempt made to defend the outsize compensation given hospital and health system executives involves the same arguments, thus suggesting they are talking points, possibly crafted as a public relations ploy. We first listed the talking points here, and then provided additional examples of their use. here, here here, here, here, and here, here and here

They are:
- We have to pay competitive rates
- We have to pay enough to retain at least competent executives, given how hard it is to be an executive
- Our executives are not merely competitive, but brilliant (and have to be to do such a difficult job).
So, as if on cue, according to an article in the Charlotte Business Journal,

Carolinas HealthCare said in a statement that its executive compensation program is 'designed to attract, recruit and retain high-performing executives by providing market-competitive, reasonable and fair compensation.'

It notes that recruiting and retaining talent enables the health-care system to pursue 'its mission, lead in the transformation of healthcare and provide best-in-class care to our communities.'
Despite Evidence of Less than High Performance


But some recent news articles suggested that Carolinas Healthcare management is not so high-performing.  For example, we found the following articles, discussed in chronological order,

"Lawsuit: Hospitals Cheated Medicare out of Millions" (Charlotte Observer, September 2, 2015)

A newly unsealed lawsuit alleges that Carolinas Medical Center and N.C. Baptist Hospital have fraudulently obtained tens of millions of dollars from Medicare and Medicaid through an arrangement that artificially inflated their expenses.

The federal suit, filed by Forsyth County whistleblower Joe Vincoli, contends that the two hospitals overstated their costs – and thereby extracted more money from Medicare – by using a company that they own to provide health benefits to their employees.

"Employee Satisfaction at Carolinas HealthCare System Dropped in 2015" (Charlotte Observer, November 6, 2015)

The system had been rated at the 99th percentile in 2012, the 95th percentile in 2013-4, and dropped to the 76th percentile in 2015. The article stated that employees blamed staffing issues and poor leadership.

"Rehab Center Drops Program" (WSOC-TV, January 5, 2016)

The inpatient drug treatment program at First Step at Carolinas Medical Center - Union was dropped for reasons said to be "part financial- and part research-based." The overseer of the local drug treatment court decried the loss of a "very valuable" program.

"Hospitals Failed to Report Outbreaks Linked to Tainted Scopes, Senate Report Says" (Los Angeles Times, January 22, 2016)

This article lead with the failure of Carolinas Medical Center to report an infection apparently caused by the use of an endoscope that later was implicated in multiple infections at multiple hospitals.  The article noted that

Federal law requires hospitals to report deaths from a medical device to the FDA within 10 days. If the device seriously injures a patient, the hospital must notify the manufacturer within 10 days. Both notices require hospitals to fill out what the FDA calls Form 3500A.

"Notice: 360 to Lose Jobs at Health Care Facility" (WSOC-TV, January 26, 2016)

The article noted layoffs at Carolinas Medical Center- Main Rehabilitation program but noted "it's not clear why the positions are being eliminated."

So instead of high performance, the recent track-record of hospital system management included allegations of defrauding the federal government, a marked decrease in employee satisfaction, the closing of an apparently valuable rehabilitation program, the failure to report apparent adverse effects of a medical device despite requirements in federal law, and layoffs at a rehabilitation facility.  

No wonder that Karen Garloch reported in her February, 2016 article,

On hearing about the latest CHS compensation report, Mecklenburg County commissioner Pat Cotham said, 'It’s kind of depressing. … Nothing against Mr. Tarwater personally. He’s led a successful organization. … Generally I struggle with these multimillion-dollar deals. Is anybody really that valuable?'

The question becomes more acute given that it is not even clear whether Carolinas Healthcare is a private non-profit organization or a government agency.  As we noted last year, per Ms Garloch,

The system is technically a hospital authority, created by state law in 1943, and is run by a self-perpetuating board that includes top community and business leaders whose nominations get approval from the commissioners’ chairman. Over the years, chairmen have acknowledged that action is basically a rubber stamp.

A recently closed investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor focused on whether the hospital system is a governmental agency, as it claims. On Thursday, commissioner Bill James said that question remains open and might have bearing on compensation.

James said documents in the investigation included a statement by a lawyer for CHS who said hospital debts 'have been and will be backstopped by the County’s taxing power.' But James said state law has given commissioners no oversight role in connection with CHS.

'I don’t know how CHS can expect taxpayers to ‘backstop’ their billions of debt with County tax dollars without any oversight over it,' James wrote in an email.

'I do not know what is just compensation for a hospital CEO,' James wrote. But he added that most government agencies have 'typical limitations on pay.'

You would think that all those people who loudly critique spending by the "gummint" would be loudly decrying pay at Carolinas Healthcare.  However, I can find no evidence of such protests.

Summary

Whether the top managers of Carolinas Healthcare are government bureaucrats or non-profit executives, they seem to manage to pay themselves more each year, regardless of what other employees are paid, regardless of inflation, and regardless of how well the organization is upholding its health care mission.  This is another example of ho hospital managers have become "value extractors."  The opportunity to extract value has become a major driver of managerial decision making.  And this decision making is probably the major reason our health care system is so expensive and inaccessible, and why it provides such mediocre care for so much money.

So to repeat, true health care reform would put in place leadership that understands the health care context, upholds health care professionals' values, and puts patients' and the public's health ahead of extraneous, particularly short-term financial concerns. We need health care governance that holds health care leaders accountable, and ensures their transparency, integrity and honesty.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

The $5.3 Million a Year Government Bureaucrat - The Top Administrator, or CEO of a "Government Entity," Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority, "Doing Business as" Carolinas Healthcare Gets a Raise

The pay given to top managers of health care organizations continues its seemingly inexorable rise, and the justifications for it seem to be increasingly perfunctory.  However, a closer look at individual cases can generate even more questions about how we got to this pass.  Our latest example arises from a recent news article about the compensation of top managers at Carolinas Healthcare.  

CEO Pay Levitating Since 2009

In 2011, we started following executive compensation at the hospital system now known as Carolinas Healthcare. Our posts in 2011, 2012, and 2013 all fit the same pattern.The total compensation given to its CEO, Michael C Tarwater, was
- $3.4 million in 2009
- $3.7 million in 2010
- $4.2 million in 2011
- $4.76 million in 2012
- $4.9 million in 2013 (per the Charlotte Observer)


In February, 2014, per Karen Garloch reporting in the Charlotte Observer, we have the newest figure:
- $5.3 million in 2014

The details were

the system’s CEO Michael Tarwater received $5.3 million in total compensation in 2014, an increase of 7.7 percent over the previous year.

Tarwater, 61, who has led the $8 billion nonprofit system since 2002, received a salary of $1.3 million, two bonuses totaling $3.3 million, and other compensation, including retirement and health benefits of $690,280,...


In addition, other top managers also were paid in the millions:

• Joseph Piemont, president and chief operating officer: $3,558,907, 6.3 percent increase
• Greg Gombar, chief financial officer: $2,340,613, 4.7 percent increase
• Laurence Hinsdale, executive vice president: $1,918,371, 2.2 percent decrease
• Paul Franz, executive vice president: $1,721,104, 2.9 percent decrease
• Dr. Roger Ray, chief physician executive: $1,619,584, 5 percent increase
• John Miller, chief executive officer, AnMed Health: $1,598,205, change not available
• John Knox, chief administrative officer: $1,434,112, 2.5 percent increase
• Dennis Phillips, executive vice president: $1,391,918, 3.3 percent decrease
• Debra Plousha Moore, chief human resources officer: $1,269,022, 5.2 percent increase


Not unexpectedly, those who are supposed to be exerting stewardship over Carolinas Healthcare provided just another version of the standard talking points to justify this largesse.

'Having talented leaders capable of managing one of the nation’s most comprehensive health care systems in a very complex environment allows Carolinas HealthCare System to maintain its mission and provide the best care to all of our communities,' said board Chairman Edward Brown, president of Hendrick Automotive Group.

As we have repeated far more often than I would like (most recently here)

It seems nearly every attempt made to defend the outsize compensation given hospital and health system executives involves the same arguments, thus suggesting they are talking points, possibly crafted as a public relations ploy. We first listed the talking points here, and then provided additional examples of their use. here, here here, here, here, and here, here and here

They are:
- We have to pay competitive rates
- We have to pay enough to retain at least competent executives, given how hard it is to be an executive - Our executives are not merely competitive, but brilliant (and have to be to do such a difficult job).

For the most recent update on Carolinas Healthcare, the board chairman only bothered with the last point.

So far, the case of compensation of top hired managers at Carolinas Healthcare looks very similar to many other cases at other big health care systems.  But this case has a big twist.

A Public Authority Whose Mission is to Serve the Poor

In 2012, we posted, based on another article that year by the indomitable Ms Garloch, how Carolinas Healthcare really is the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority, a public hospital authority created by North Carolina state law to serve the poor.  But faced with declining revenues in the 1980's, hospital management decided to try to attract paying patients, which allowed the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority to transform into a big hospital system.  Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority managers came up with the idea of using a snappy new name, so the public hospital authority began "doing business as" Carolinas Healthcare, never mind whether a public hospital authority should really be considered as "doing business."

Yet the organization is still a public health authority.  Its charter and governance have never been changed.  Since the 1980s, however, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Health Authority bureaucrats have represented the organization as "government entity" when that is advantageous to them, or as a "non-profit hospital system" at other times.  

For example, it still gets to raise capital through directly issuing tax exempt municipal bonds.  For example, see this MunicipalBonds.com summary of a recent bond issue.

Also, at least through 2011, it was financed directly by Mecklenburg county to serve the poor, which, again was the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority's original mission.  In a 2012 article in the Charlotte Observer, Karen Garloch wrote,

last June, county commissioners voted to stop paying Carolinas HealthCare $16 million a year to care for the uninsured. With a profit of $428 million in 2010 and nearly $2 billion in reserves, the system no longer needed taxpayers’ help, commissioners concluded.

County Manager Harry Jones said the subsidy was important at one time, 'but circumstances have changed.' He cited a 1994 county committee report that raised this question:

'Given the current profitability of the hospitals, is it not reasonable to suggest that the hospitals become marginally less profitable by absorbing greater indigent care costs?'

Again, in 2011, the US Department of Labor began investigating Carolinas Healthcare about its provision of health benefits to its employees via Medcost, an entity whose ownership it shared with NC Baptist Hospital.  US federal law (ERISA) in general bans companies from providing health benefits to employees via subsidiaries.  NC Baptist settled similar charges in 2013.  The investigation of Carolinas Healthcare is not complete, but ironically a point of contention is its argument that it is a "government entity," and hence the law does not apply to it.  (See this article in the Winston-Salem Journal.)

On the other hand, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority bureaucrats have maintained that the organization, under the new name they chose, does not have the obligations to be transparent that other public entities have.  As Ms Garloch wrote in 2012,

It’s a public organization with a private attitude – open to 'all God’s children,' as hospital officials like to say, but not as open and transparent as other government agencies.

Then,

Basic facts about the hospital system can be hard to get.

For this series, Observer reporters asked Carolinas HealthCare to disclose total administrative expenses for 2010. A corresponding figure was publicly available from Novant through audited financial statements.

Several months after the question was posed, Carolinas HealthCare spokeswoman Gail Rosenberg

responded: 'We do not have the information … on a system-wide basis.'

Mecklenburg officials have criticized the system for lack of transparency.

Last year, [County Manager Harry] Jones declared the system in breach of contract because it failed to share data about the county-owned psychiatric hospital that is managed by Carolinas HealthCare.

'As a governmental entity, (the hospital system) should be more than willing to account to the taxpayers on how they spend … its money,' Jones wrote to Michael Tarwater, the hospital system’s CEO.

In fact, the argument that Carolinas Healthcare is Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority, and hence is as a government agency obligated to a degree of transparency was confirmed by a judge in December, 2014, as again reported by the Charlotte Observer.  A lower court had dismissed a lawsuit that contended that Carolinas Heathcare had "violated state public record laws" by keeping confidential a legal settlement it had made with the former Wachovia bank.  However, the lawyer appealed, and

Hospital lawyers had argued that the state public records law doesn’t cover settlements arising from litigation by a government agency.

But in Wednesday’s ruling, a three-judge panel of the appeals court unanimously rejected that argument. The public records act doesn’t specifically exempt such settlement documents, the court concluded.
Disproportionate Pay for Non-Profit Hospital Executives, Much Less Government Bureaucrats

Thus there is a very good argument that the CEO and other top "executives" of Carolinas Healthcare are really the top government bureaucrats at Charlotte-Mecklenburg Health Authority.  But these executives' pay seems out of line even if they were the managers of a non-profit health care system.  In particular, the rising compensation given top management does not square with top management's recent layoffs of middle management.  In 2014, the Charlotte Observer reported,

Carolinas HealthCare System has eliminated more than 100 management positions – including two jobs that paid a total of about $3 million – as part of a goal to trim $110 million in expenses from next year’s budget, hospital officials announced Tuesday.

Cutbacks are necessary, in part, because of federal and state budget cuts in Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement for seniors, low-income and disabled patients, CEO Michael Tarwater said.
Furthermore, despite the board chairman's assertion that the "executives'" pay is deserved for fulfilling the mission, officially the mission of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Health Authority is still to serve the poor, as far as I can tell.  Yet, in recent years, there have been questions raised about how well the organization serves the poor.  In 2012, we noted that the system had become known for its aggressive attempts to get payment from indigent patients.  In 2013, we noted that the system had pursued legal action against tens of thousands of patients.


Summary

The public discussion about Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority, "doing business as" Caroloinas Healthcare, has been confusing.  However, it seems clear, in my humble opinion, that it is still a public, that is government entity.

This raises huge questions.  One is why has it not been more subject to the appropriate political leadership?  In fact, Ms Garloch's 2012 article noted that

The 1943 hospital authority law intentionally kept elected officials and politics out of operations. The link is that the commissioners’ chairman must sign off on hospital board nominees.

It has been a rubber stamp.

County officials remember once in 30 years that a proposed board member was rejected. That was in 2008 when nominees included Gloria Pace King, who had been ousted as CEO of the United Way of the Central Carolinas because of public outcry over her $2 million pension package.
So it appears political leadership could have been exerted, at least to the extent of vetoing the board's proposed new candidates for board membership, but that has never been done, for unclear reasons.

Other questions are how did the bureaucrats in charge of this entity get away with massively changing the nature of its operations de facto without being subject to any political oversight, and without having to change its charter and governance to correspond to these changes?  Finally, how did its top hired bureaucrats (whether they are called managers, or executives really is immaterial) get to pay themselves at least an order of magnitude more than any government bureaucrat of whom I am aware, to pay themselves according to the current outrageous standard for executives of for-profit corporations?

I do not have the capacity to do the investigations necessary to answer these questions.  Hopefully, not only will reporters like Ms Garloch continue to dig deeper, but given this case's implications, it will become subject of more official investigations.

Meanwhile, it has become not merely a great example of how top hired management pay in health care continues to rise past any levels that can be rationally justified, but of what I once called the managers' coup d'etat.  It shows how hired bureaucrats, absent adequate supervision and accountability, have managed to transform health care organizations into instruments of their own enrichment.  To repeat,  true health care reform would put in place leadership that understands the health care context, upholds health care professionals' values, and puts patients' and the public's health ahead of extraneous, particularly short-term financial concerns. We need health care governance that holds health care leaders accountable, and ensures their transparency, integrity and honesty.

But this sort of reform would challenge the interests of managers who are getting very rich off the current system.  So I am afraid the US may end up going far down this final common pathway before enough people manifest enough strength to make real changes.   

    

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Carolinas Healthcare System Pays Executives Even More

In May, 2012, we discussed the contrast between the outsize compensation given to top executives of Carolinas Healthcare System, a large tax-exempt public hospital authority, and the apparent failure of the system to fulfill it promise to provide community care.  Now we can update that story.

2012 Executive Compensation

The Charlotte Observer reported on the compensation given to top executives at the Carolinas Health Care System in 2012:

The top executive at Carolinas HealthCare System received $4.76 million in 2012 compensation, a 12 percent increase over 2011, as the system celebrated a profitable year and met all of its systemwide performance goals, the system announced.

CEO Michael Tarwater, 59, who has led the $7.5 billion nonprofit system for more than 10 years, received a salary of $1.1 million, two bonuses totaling $2.8 million, and other compensation, including retirement and health benefits, of $795,724.

The top 10 executives at Carolinas HealthCare each received more than $1 million in total compensation. Most received increases of more than 8 percent.

A more detailed list, which included the rate of increase since 2011::

Michael Tarwater, CEO: $4,760,026 – 12.36 percent increase
Joseph Piemont, president and chief operating officer: $2,880,926 – 13.57 percent increase
Greg Gombar, chief financial officer: $1,898,027 – 8.35 percent increase
Laurence Hinsdale, executive vice president: $1,844,413 – 8.92 percent increase
Paul Franz, executive vice president: $1,704,671 – 8.17 percent increase
Dennis Phillips, executive vice president: $1,420,521 – 5.14 percent increase
Dr. Roger Ray, chief medical officer: $1,315,148 – 21.76 percent increase
John Knox, chief administrative officer: $1,296,185 – 8.24 percent increase
Debra Plousha Moore, executive vice president: $1.145,357 – increase not available
Russell Guerin, executive vice president: $1,141,171 million – 7.56 percent increase

Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/02/06/3835851/charlotte-hospital-pay.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/02/06/3835851/charlotte-hospital-pay.html#storylink=cpy

Also here were the compensation figures for some leaders of individual hospitals within the system:

Others in Carolinas HealthCare System - 2012
• Spencer Lilly, president, Carolinas Medical Center: $633,326
• Robert Larrison, president, Carolinas Rehabilitation: $348,976
• Douglas Roush, president, CMC-Mercy: $262,745
• Christopher Hummer, president, CMC-Pineville: $549,616
• William Leonard, president, CMC-University: $378,369
• Phyllis Wingate-Jones, president, CMC-NorthEast: $761,160
• Peter Acker, president, CMC-Lincoln: $385,847
• Michael Lutes, president, CMC-Union: $488,427

Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/02/06/3835851/charlotte-hospital-pay.html#storylink=cpy

The Context

The context is that Carolinas Healthcare is a large tax-exempt public hospital system that claims that it "works to improve and enhance the overall health and wellbeing of its communities" according to its web-site.  However, there have been accusations, for example here by "Jessica Curtis, director of the Hospital Accountability Project for Community Catalyst in Boston," that is has been

'...sending very low income patients to collections and suing them as well.'

The Observer and The News & Observer reported last year that during the five years ending in 2010, North Carolina hospitals filed more than 40,000 lawsuits. Most of the suits were filed by Carolinas HealthCare.

Note that we discussed the contrast between this hospital system's public nature and aspirational statements about serving the community on one had, and its oversize executive compensation on the other hand here.  Since then, executive compensation has only gone up.

The Usual Talking Points for Justification

Of course, when asked, defenders of the hospital system gave the stock justifications.  For example,

Carolinas HealthCare officials said executive compensation is 'performance based' and reflects the system’s growth. 

The Observer found a health care executive compensation consultant to make the usual arguments about the need to pay market rates to prevent supposedly talented executives from being recruited elsewhere:

 Consultants who assist hospitals in setting executive compensation say they compare peers at hospital systems of comparable size, complexity and performance.

'If , he’s going to get paid higher in the range. That individual is very vulnerable to being recruited away' said Bob Erra, president of Integrated Healthcare Strategies.

'The last thing a compensation committee wants to do is to lose a leader over pay,' said Erra, whose Minneapolis-based firm works with Novant Health but not Carolinas HealthCare.

 Just as we mentioned in our most recent post, whenever anyone bothers to try to justify extravagant executive compensation at hospitals, and for that matter, most other health care organizations throughout the US, they seem to repeat the same set of talking points.    We first listed the talking points here, and then provided additional examples of their use here, here and here.   The talking points are:
-  we pay what everyone else pays
-  CEOs work hard and are brilliant, and so deserve high pay
-  high pay is needed to attract and retain competent, if not brilliant people.



Note that without specific evidence to back them up, the first two talking points at least are logical fallacies.  The first is an appeal to common practice.  The second is an appeal to authority.

None of the examples of these talking points we have seen so far explain why these apply to CEOs and other top hired managers, but not to other kinds of employees.

So it should be no surprise that the justifications for the largess to hospital executives at Carolinas follow the talking points yet again.

-  We Pay What Everyone Else Pays => "they compare peers at hospital systems of comparable size, complexity and performance."  Note further that it is hard to believe the comparisons were only to other public hospital systems, that is, hospital systems run by local government

- CEOs Work Hard and Are Brilliant => "(the CEO) is a high performer...."  Note further that as usual no evidence of the CEO's specific performance was offered.

- High Pay Needed for Retention => "That individual is very vulnerable to being recruited away."  Note that as we wrote recently, most CEOs are recruited from within the organization, and no specific evidence that this specific CEO was particularly likely to be recruited away was offered. 

So as is usual, underlying these talking points there was no evidence, nor arguments that would make them more logical.


Summary: the More Things Change

The more they stay the same.  Thus this seems to be yet another example of how top managers almost always now seem able to personally profit from their positions of trust.  In this particular example, however, these were managers of a public organization, so it may be possible that public pressure could make them more accountable and hold them to more reasonable pay.  

So to repeat my conclusions from 2012....  The governance of this organization, like that of many others we have discussed, needs to regain accountability, transparency, integrity, and ethics. It must insist that the leaders it hires uphold the mission ahead of other concerns, particularly personal enrichment. It must provide these leaders with realistic incentives based on how well they uphold this mission, not on revenue or operating margin.

Until such changes are accomplished, expect this hospital system, like many other health care organizations, to contribute only to our ever rising prices, declining access, and stagnating health care quality.

Friday, May 04, 2012

From Serving the Poor to Paying Executives Millions - Carolinas HealthCare System

A striking contrast between a large health care organization's historic mission and its current practices appeared in a series published by the Charlotte News-Observer called "Prognosis: Profits" about the Carolinas HealthCare System.

A Historical Mission to Serve the Poor

The system evolved from a public hospital meant to serve the poor.  In particular,(1)
Only 30 years ago, it was a charity hospital called Charlotte Memorial – a crowded, dreary place that lost money every year because most of its patients couldn’t pay their bills.
The hospital system is actually "a public, tax-exempt entity called a hospital authority". Because of this special status, it has the power of eminent domain, the ability to seize property albeit with compensation, and its employees have "more privacy protection that those of other public agencies."

However, in the "greed is good" 1980s, the hospital began a transformation,
The board hired [Harry] Nurkin in 1981 to revamp Charlotte Memorial’s image, attract paying patients and avoid the fate of struggling public hospitals in Atlanta and Chicago.

Until then, patients with insurance mostly chose Presbyterian Hospital or Mercy Hospital, with stately buildings at the edge of Myers Park.

With a vision of building one of the Southeast’s finest medical centers, Nurkin paid attention to details, such as wallpaper, plants and furniture. And he put the hospital in the black by improving collections from patients and insurers.

In 1983, when Nurkin unveiled the hospital’s first long-range plan, some board members sat in wonder at a slide show that accompanied his bold outline, according to 'A Great Public Compassion,' a book by writer Jerry Shinn.

The plan called for a heart institute, a doctors’ building and an 11-story, $40 million tower that would replace a 1940s wing. All of that came true – and more.

Now a Huge Hospital System

From those humble origins, Carolinas HealthCare System has now become(2)
a juggernaut. It’s now the country’s second-largest public hospital system, behind only the nationwide system of Veterans Affairs hospitals.

One of the benefits of that growth is access to quality medical care. Carolinas HealthCare offers one of five organ transplant programs in the state and operates the region’s most comprehensive trauma center, where accident victims frequently arrive via medical helicopter. Five-year-old Levine Children’s Hospital has brought new pediatric specialties to Charlotte, and Levine Cancer Institute has recruited specialists from such respected institutions as the Cleveland Clinic.

With nearly $7 billion in annual revenue, Carolinas HealthCare runs about 30 hospitals and owns more than $1 billion worth of property in Mecklenburg County alone. It has more than $2 billion in investments.

In the five-year period ending in 2011, it spent $1.8 billion on capital projects.

Forgetting the Mission: Suing Poor Patients

However, as the system grew, its mission seems to have been forgotten.

In particular, Carolinas HealthCare seems to now have a penchant for suing poor patients who cannot pay its bills. A Charlotte Observer article documented that while the hospital does not refuse poor patients care, it may later pursue them if they cannot pay. The article noted the case of a woman who was assured that the hospital had funds to pay for patients like her, but who then faced a lawsuit for $34,000 and a lien on her house. In general(3)
most N.C. hospitals are tax-exempt – a distinction that saves them millions each year. In exchange, these nonprofits are expected to provide financial help to those without the means to pay.

But thousands of times a year, hospitals are suing patients instead, an investigation by the Charlotte Observer and The News & Observer of Raleigh found.

An in-depth look at some of those cases suggests most of the patients were uninsured, and that a significant number of them should have qualified for free hospital care.

Critics contend those hospitals are financially ruining people they could afford to help. Carolinas HealthCare System, the multibillion-dollar public enterprise that owns CMC-Mercy, has generated average annual profits of more than $300 million over the past three years.

During the five years ending in 2010, N.C. hospitals filed more than 40,000 lawsuits to collect on bills.

Most of those suits were filed by just two entities: Carolinas HealthCare and Wilkes Regional Medical Center in North Wilkesboro. Each filed more than 12,000 suits over the five-year period, according to state courts data. Wilkes Regional, which is managed by Carolinas HealthCare, appears to be the state’s most litigious individual hospital.

In addition,
Often, the lawsuits hit people who are among those paying the highest rates for hospital care: the uninsured. Bills for uninsured patients are usually higher because they don’t have insurance companies to negotiate discounts on their behalf.

It’s unclear how many of the patients sued in North Carolina lacked health insurance and substantial income or assets. But in interviews with 25 of those patients, the newspapers found 17 of them were uninsured; 10 said they were never told about the hospitals’ financial assistance programs.

An editorial summarized the contrast between Carolinas HealthCare historic mission and its current practices(4)
Carolinas HealthCare, once a small, struggling operation, has become one of the top hospital systems in the country. Novant Health, owner of Presbyterian Hospital, has grown into a powerful and respected health care provider. Their successes have come thanks to an aggressive philosophy of accumulation and growth, which has led to patients in the Charlotte region having access to the latest in medical technology and research, as well as top doctors in a diversity of medical fields.

But that accumulation has contributed to the high cost of health care in North Carolina, and that growth has caused the hospitals to stray at times from their non-profit charitable mission. A Charlotte Observer and News & Observer investigation that begins today details how a hunger for money and power has caused the two hospitals to sometimes lose their way, contributing to the region’s health care cost woes and leaving thousands of patients with financially crippling bills.

Opaque, Unaccountable Governance

While the Charlotte Observer did not provide opinions about the reasons that this large health care organization appears to have forgotten its raison d'etre, its reporting suggests some familiar elements.

The governance of the organization may have been appropriate for a small, struggling public hospital, but as the system grew, lack of accountability and transparency may have become more important. It is easier to lose one's way when no one is observing one's actions.(1)
Most hospital business gets done quietly – until there is a well-planned announcement.

The system’s self-perpetuating board includes top community and business leaders whose nominations get approval from the Mecklenburg commissioners’ chairman.

Quarterly hospital system board meetings, at 7 a.m., are polite and scripted. Votes are unanimous on everything from building new hospitals to borrowing millions of dollars. Questions are worked out in private discussions, closed-door committee meetings or executive sessions.

Meetings aren’t widely publicized. Except for a couple of newspaper reporters, only board members and hospital officials attend. Future meeting dates are provided to those who attend board meetings or call the system’s main office.

State law requires public organizations with websites to post meeting times. Carolinas HealthCare had not been doing that until last week, after an Observer reporter asked about it.

The board’s agenda sets no time for public comment.

While operating so quietly, the board appears to have become a very cozy little group,
The 1943 hospital authority law intentionally kept elected officials and politics out of operations. The link is that the commissioners’ chairman must sign off on hospital board nominees.

It has been a rubber stamp.

County officials remember once in 30 years that a proposed board member was rejected. That was in 2008 when nominees included Gloria Pace King, who had been ousted as CEO of the United Way of the Central Carolinas because of public outcry over her $2 million pension package.

In December 2008, the board renominated King for a new term. But hospital officials say Roberts, then commissioners’ chairwoman, objected, and King wasn’t reappointed.

Over the years, the board has included city leaders, such as bank CEOs Hugh McColl and Ed Crutchfield, and Stuart Dickson, the retired head of the company that owns Harris Teeter. His father, Rush S. Dickson, was an original board member whose name is on the entrance to what is now Carolinas Medical Center.

Lavish CEO Compensation

As noted earlier, not only are the actions of the hospital system's governing body kept secret, but up to recently, compensation paid to all employees, including top executives was also secret.(1)
State law gives its employees more privacy protection than those of other public agencies.

For example, salaries of all state, county and city government employees are public. That’s not true for public hospital employees.

Until a 2009 change in state law, Carolinas HealthCare had for years refused to make public the total compensation for top executives. They said state law precluded them from disclosing more than basic salary.

As a result, the public hospital system wasn’t disclosing as much detail as its private counterpart, Novant Health, does in publicly available reports to the IRS.

At the urging of the Observer and other state newspapers, legislators broadened the law in 2009 to require disclosure of total compensation for top executives at public hospitals.

So it should not be any surprise that an opaque, unaccountable board run by a cozy group of insiders saw fit to allow its friends in the management make some money, a lot of money. The Charlotte Observer reported that there were nine hired managers with total compensation greater than $1 million in 2011.(5)
Michael Tarwater
CEO, Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$4,236,305
Percentage increase over prior year:
14.10%

Joseph Piemont
President/Chief Operating Officer,
Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$2,536,792
Percentage increase over prior year:
19.70%

Greg Gombar
CFO, Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$1,751,798
Percentage increase over prior year:
8.90%

Laurence Hinsdale
Executive Vice President, Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$1,693,314
Percentage increase over prior year:
44.10%

Paul Franz
Executive Vice President, Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$1,575,927
Percentage increase over prior year:
-1.30%

Dennis Phillips
Executive Vice President, Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$1,351,138
Percentage increase over prior year:
12.20%

John Knox
Chief Administrative Officer, Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$1,197,528
Percentage increase over prior year:
11.80%

Roger Ray
Chief Medical Officer, Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$1,080,159
Percentage increase over prior year:
No data for prior year

Russ Guerin
Executive Vice President, Carolinas HealthCare System
Total 2011 compensation:
$1,060,931
Percentage increase over prior year:
3.00%

Should it be surprising that executives who can become so rich, and who are subject to so little oversight, are more interested in preserving the hospital system's operating margin which supports their wealth than in providing the care to poor people that was the hospital system's original reason to exist?

Summary

As the local NAACP pointed out, the hospital system should better uphold its mission(6)
'The Bible says we’re not supposed to burden the poor and the sick and the afflicted. We’re supposed to lift them and help them and heal them,' NAACP President the Rev. William Barber said during the Charlotte stop of a statewide tour designed to bring attention to the struggles of low-income people. '(Carolinas HealthCare) is a group with money hounding people who are just trying to make it.'

However, I submit that restoration of this organization's mission will require more than exhortation. The governance of this organization, like that of many others we have discussed, needs to regain accountability, transparency, integrity, and ethics. It must insist that the leaders it hires uphold the mission ahead of other concerns, particularly personal enrichment. It must provide these leaders with realistic incentives based on how well they uphold this mission, not on revenue or operating margin.

Until such changes are accomplished, expect this hospital system, like many other health care organizations, to contribute only to our ever rising prices, declining access, and stagnating health care quality.

References

1.  Garloch K, Alexander A. Carolinas HealthCare System's evoluation: public hospital with private attitude.  Charlotte Observer, April 21, 2012.  Link here.
2. Alexander A, Garloch K, Neff J. Nonprofit hospitals thrive on profits. Charlotte Observer, April 21, 2012. Link here.
3. Alexander A, Raynor D. Hospital suits force new pain on patients. Charlotte Observer, April 23, 2012. Link here.
4. Anonymous. Money over mission at non-profit hospitals. Charlotte Observer, April 22, 2012. Link here.
5. Anonymous. Million-dollar hospital executives in North Carolina. Charlotte Observer, April 21, 2012. Link here.
6. Alexander A. Stop suing patients, NAACP tells Carolinas HealthCare System. Charlotte Observer, May 2, 2012. Link here.

Monday, January 31, 2011

More on Hospital Executives' Disproportionate Pay

Local US news media brought some more striking examples of disproportionate pay given to health care organizational leaders. 

Carolinas HealthCare System: Corporate-Style Compensation for a Public Hospital CEO

Carolinas HealthCare System declares it is "the largest health care system in the Carolinas and the third largest public system in the nation" in its membership blurb for the National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems.  That association describes its members thus,
Since the establishment of the first public hospital in the United States in the early 1700s, safety net hospitals and health systems have been an essential part of our nation’s health care delivery system.

In the 21st century, safety net hospitals continue their long tradition of quality and service to the community. By delivering care to America’s growing number of working uninsured families, providing world-class trauma and emergency care, preparing for and responding to the threat of terrorism, epidemics, and natural disasters, and training the next generation of doctors, nurses, and dentists—safety net health systems ensure our nation’s communities are health and strong.
The Charlotte Observer just noted how much this "safety net hospital," which declared solidarity with "working uninsured families," pays its CEO:
Carolinas HealthCare System paid its CEO $3.7 million in 2010, $287,000 more than the year before as the system lifted a pay freeze and paid bonuses for reaching annual and long-term goals.

Chief Executive Officer Michael Tarwater, 57, who has led the $6.3 billion public hospital system for nine years, received a base salary of $986,172, two bonuses totaling $2 million, and other compensation, including retirement and health benefits, of $630,346.

In 2009 his compensation package totaled $3.4 million.

So the leader of an organization that serves the poor and uninsured gets enough compensation to make him  quite rich.    

Mary Washington Healthcare: Net Income Increases, but 20% Goes to Bonuses of Top 20 Executives

According to the Fredricksburg (Virginia) Free Lance-Star, from 2008 to 2009, Mary Washington Healthcare saw its total revenues increase, but its net surplus decrease,
The company's net income was $25 million in 2008, up from $20 million in 2007.
Then
The company opened its second hospital that year [2009] and recorded revenues of more than $666 million, up from $551 million in 2008. However, net income dropped to $8 million, in part because of the opening of Stafford Hospital.

So what happened to its executive compensation?
The top employees at Mary Washington Healthcare earned more than $1.1 million in bonuses in 2009, their reward for a successful 2008.

More than two dozen key executives and employee physicians earned annual bonuses ranging from $2,000 to $246,278. The median bonus for the company was more than $28,000.

Fred Rankin, president and chief executive officer, received the largest bonus among managers: $151,430. Rankin continues to be the firm's highest-paid employee, with a 2009 salary package of $955,282.

The hospital's net income increased $5 million (25%) from 2007 to 2008.  It then dropped $17 million (66%) from 2008 to 2009.  Reflecting 2008 results, its top 20 executives received 2009 bonuses of over $1 million, an amount that exceeded 20% of the hospital's 2008 net revenue increase on which the bonuses were based.  The total compensation of these 20 people in 2009 was approximately $6.5 million (see here), which exceeded the hospital's entire increase in net revenue from 2007 to 2008.  The hospital CEO's compensation in 2009 would have consumed one-eighth of the net revenue that year.  This all suggests that the top executives of this hospital consume an inordinate part of the organization's total revenue stream.    

Hutcheson Medical Center: CEO Compensation and Deficits Rise

Here is how the Rome News-Tribune described the financial status of Hutcheson Medical Center, located in Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia:
HMC reported a profit of $766,766 in 2007 and a $7.3 million loss in 2009.

In addition,
In 2008 more than 80 Hutcheson employees lost their jobs when the hospital eliminated its emergency medical services.

And after the profitable year of 2007, the Hutcheson administration approved major renovations for the hospital’s front lobby and entered into a $35.5 million dollar bond issue to fund further renovations and pay off debt.

That bond issue is currently in default, which prohibits the next $10 million payment from being released to HMC.

Things look worse in the future:
At a meeting Thursday, Jan. 28, of the Hospital Authority Board, HMC chief financial officer Gerald Faircloth revealed that the hospital had losses of $3.3 million in the first quarter of budget year 2011 and projected total 2011 losses at around $9 million.

Faircloth, whose compensation went down by $15,000 from 2008 to 2009, also reported that HMC has an estimated 15 days of operating cash on hand.

'So the wolf is at the door,' said Bill Cohen, a trustee who represents Catoosa County on the Hospital Authority Board.

Faircloth agreed.

Wolves notwithstanding, however, the Hutcheson CEO has done very well:
In the face of Hutcheson Medical Center’s financial losses over the past several years, financial documents reveal that president and CEO Charles Stewart’s compensation package has increased more than 26 percent from 2007 to 2009.

According to Internal Revenue Service documents for the 2007 and 2009 budget years, Stewart received $337,081 and $425,745, respectively, in total compensation. The Fort Oglethorpe hospital’s budget year runs from October through September.

Stewart’s 2009 income includes a “bonus and incentive compensation” of $69,750.
So despite a major financial loss, lay-offs and service discontinuations, and a bond default, the CEO got "bonus and incentive compensation" in 2009.   At least that drew some attention:
'I’m really surprised that the board (Stewart) works for would give him such an increase,' said Walker County commissioner Bebe Heiskell, referring to the HMC board of directors that oversees the day-to-day operations of the hospital. 'For a failing hospital that’s exorbitant.'

So while the hospital's financial performance continued to decline, the total compensation provided its CEO continued to increase.

Summary

Here were three instances in which the compensation of top non-profit hospital leaders seemed out of all proportion to the hospitals' financial results, let alone their accomplishment of their missions. In the first case, the CEO of a public hospital system meant to serve poor and uninsured patients was paid enough in one year to make him an instant multi-millionaire. In the second, the bonuses alone handed out to a handful of top executives ostensibly based on a net revenue increase would have consumed one-fifth of that increase, and when net revenue declined the next year, those executives' compensation would have almost consumed that entire year's net revenue. In the third, a CEO got increasing compensation while his hospital suffered increasing losses.

As we have said before, far too often the leaders of not-for-profit health care institutions seem more interested in padding their own bottom lines than upholding the institutions' missions. They often seem entirely unaware of their duty to put those missions ahead of their own self-interest. Like the financial services sector in the era of "greed is good," health care too often seems run by "insiders hijacking established institutions for their personal benefit." True health care reform would encourage leadership of health care who understand health care and care about its mission, rather than those who see a quick way to make a small fortune.