Is Mercy Health Abandoning Catholic Mission?
| By Jim Doyle and Tim Townsend, St. Louis Post-Dispatch |
Two nuns first established an infirmary in 1888 near
The city's largest hospital and largest employer is the centerpiece of
But the nonprofit health system's leading role here will soon end if executives at Chesterfield-based
To pull that off, Mercy officials must not only convince federal regulators -- who are cracking down on hospital monopolies in smaller cities -- but also
The future of what locals affectionately call "St. Joe's" lies in a bubbling stew of healthcare politics, antitrust law, and religious doctrine. And the debate over its fate cuts to the core of the shifting role of the Catholic health ministry in an era of hospital consolidation. In the last year, Catholic health organizations have launched a new wave of sell-offs to for-profit hospital chains.
Some critics -- including
Taylor, who leads all of
Taylor worries that the hospital buyer's promise not to provide abortion or sterilization procedures for five years after the sale will be tossed aside in year six, and that the sale will derail the hospital's commitment to his diocese's poor.
"Mercy wants to move out of less lucrative markets and into more lucrative markets like the suburbs of
Others object on legal and economic grounds. Mercy's sale to
Mercy's Britton disagrees. "Today is no different than the early days, when the sisters founded the mission in
'the greater good'
Mercy and Capella executives won't disclose the purchase price of
The first casualty of the merger, Helm said, would be the quality of patient care as Capella attempts to consolidate services and cut labor costs.
"We've got big plans," said Wiechart, indicating that Capella intends to offer more specialized care in
"The American healthcare system is in a state of transition," Mercy's Britton said. "For efficient healthcare, there cannot be a duplication of services."
Britton said that Mercy had actually hoped to buy the Capella hospital in
But in a 2010 market assessment study obtained by the
Capella's Wiechart said the two hospitals are in the "abnormal" situation of having 35 percent more hospital bed capacity than comparable
The decision this spring to sell
"A lot of things changed when the sisters stopped running the system and turned it over to the lay leaders," Levi said. "The new approach is the Almighty Dollar."
The pending hospital sale has pinched some nerves here.
"Hospitals have gotten to be more about the money than helping people," she said. "I know that all the equipment and tests cost money, but good Lord, I was in the hospital (
Alienating the ministry
When a Catholic order sells -- or "alienates," in Catholic parlance -- a property as important as a hospital to a non-Catholic entity,
Before issuing his votum, the bishop pushes hard to ensure that the incoming non-Catholic company abides by Catholic teaching. While
In 1997, St. Louis Archbishop Justin Rigali confronted
One of the stickiest issues for the Catholic church is getting non-Catholic healthcare companies to keep to the promises they make to local bishops, canon law experts say. Capella has promised not to perform abortions at Mercy hospital for five years. "But there's no guarantee that will happen," Taylor said.
Taylor said that for 125 years,
Taylor said that he'd studied other cities where Mercy had sold hospitals to non-Catholic entities and that in the wake of those sales, "there's been a negative impact on the poor in those places, so we have to be realistic about what will happen here."
Before Mercy sold its hospital in
Britton said that Mercy Ministries "in those communities where we've exited have continued to expand their services and broaden their impact."
The for-profit buyer in
In
Taylor contends that Mercy officials violated canon law by not seeking out a better -- meaning, Catholic -- buyer for the hospital. He also faulted a "lack of integrity in the decision-making process" and called the sale an "abandonment of Catholic healthcare."
"The original
Britton said the bishop "was brought in appropriately ... We spent a lot of time with
Monopoly concerns
The
"I'm just an insurance agent in
Average charges at the National Park facility are about double those at
The survey indicates that its charges for cardiovascular surgery average
However,
Earlier this year, the FTC won a victory when a federal judge temporarily halted the merger of two hospitals in
According to a Mercy financial report,
Not leaving town
Britton said a portion of the sale proceeds would be used to continue Mercy's ministry in
Mercy has also been a prime backer of the
Wiechart said the merger agreement calls for Capella to continue supporting Blankenship's clinic as well as a pregnancy care center, urgent care services, mobile mammography, and an adult
In past years,
In a 2010 cover letter to Mercy's market assessment study, Britton had thanked Mercy board members,
But some of those leaders now say they were blind-sided by this year's decision to sell the hospital. Britton assures that the merger "was not driven by financial change, but by an awareness of what the community needs."
___
(c)2012 the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Visit the St. Louis Post-Dispatch at www.stltoday.com
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| Source: | McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
| Wordcount: | 2398 |


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