California company finalizes agreement to buy two KC-area hospitals
October 14, 2014 | | 2 min read
The operator of two local Catholic hospitals has finalized their sale to a for-profit company based in Ontario, Calif.
Ascension, the nation’s largest Catholic health system, said in a statement Tuesday that it had reached a definitive agreement to sell St. Joseph Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo., and St. Mary’s Medical Center in Blue Springs to Prime Healthcare Services. The two hospitals operate through Kansas City-based Carondelet Health.
Terms of the deal, which was first announced in July, were not disclosed, and the deal remains subject to regulatory approval.
The three Carondelet Health long-term care facilities – Carondelet Manor, Villa Saint Joseph and St. Mary’s Manor – and the two hospitals’ charitable foundations will remain part of Ascension, according to the release.
Prime operates 29 hospitals with 4,700 beds in nine states.
The agreement comes just days after Prime agreed to buy six California-based hospitals from the Daughters of Charity Health System, a financially troubled Catholic health care system. Prime has agreed to make $150 million in capital improvements to the hospitals over the next several years. The purchase is subject to approval by the Vatican.
Prime, an active buyer of troubled hospitals, last year bought Providence Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., and Saint John Hospital in Leavenworth, Kan., from Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth Health System, another Catholic health system.
The purchase triggered at least two lawsuits.
In July, Sisters of Charity sued Prime in federal court alleging the company withheld payments that were supposedly due it as part of the transition of the hospitals’ operations to Prime.
Prime has denied the allegations, and a federal judge this summer sent the case to state court in Leavenworth County.
Prime is also facing a court battle with former employees of Providence and Saint John who allege the company did not provide promised severance benefits. The company has denied those allegations as well.
Elsewhere, the company faces a whistleblower suit in California alleging it defrauded Medicare. Prime has insisted its billings are proper and termed the allegations “speculative nonsense.”
According to media reports, the company’s problems in California have also prompted New Jersey authorities to require several safeguards before approving the sale of a Catholic hospital in Passaic to Prime.
Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.
Related Stories
Caregiving Squeezes Households Between Young and Old
Melissa Johnson knows her life is hardly unique. The Oak Grove, Missouri, woman cares for her infirm 72-year-old mother, who lives in her own home nearby. She calls her mother daily. She brings dinner to her several times a week. Johnson, who coordinates care with her aunt, a team of therapists, and a nurse, is…
Feeding Tubes and Defibrillators
Let’s begin with two stories about the growing and important field of bioethics. The first is from Ryan Pferdehirt, the newly named Flanigan Chair in Bioethics at the Kansas City-based Center for Practical Bioethics. A hospital once asked him to consult on a bioethics case in which a son thought his desperately ill, hospitalized mother…
After Tuberculosis Outbreak, Wyandotte County Parts Ways with Health Director
The director of the Wyandotte County Public Health Department is no longer with the agency, a spokesperson confirmed Tuesday. It comes after turmoil during the handling of the major tuberculosis outbreak, shown by emails obtained by the Kansas News Service. Elisha Caldwell had been head of the local health department while an outbreak of TB grew…


