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Let Governing Boards, Not State, Decide Hospitals’ Fate

March 7, 2008

     
         [Image: Marionette puppet show for kids in Asbury Park,  NJ,  July 23, 2006,  by Jackie.]

         I read an op-ed in yesterday\’s Courier News online entitled “New Jersey Ought To Map Out Its Hospital Closings.”  The position stated there was that economic forces are going to result in the closure of a certain number of hospitals in New Jersey, and it would be better for the legislature to “compile and publish a roster of hospitals it believes should be targeted for closure,” and then to act on that list.  The author sees this as a better outcome than the current course, which might be called “survival of the fittest.”  Admittedly, it has resulted in a string of bankruptcies and closings over the last few years, with no end in sight.  However, leaving aside what I believe is a false assumption – that a fair and politically unbiased “roster” of hospitals could be formulated – this theory is more fundamentally flawed.
          There are other options open to the governing boards of New Jersey\’s struggling hospitals besides filing for bankruptcy and closing down. I wrote here previously that  hospital boards need to candidly assess their financial condition and prospects long before bankruptcy becomes imminent, and collaborate with the other stakeholders involved to arrive at their optimal result.  Far better for these governing boards and their constituencies to decide their hospitals\’ fate than someone at the Department of Health.  But this will require hospital boards to assess, deliberate and collaborate as few have done to date. 
          Writing an editorial in the current  Metropolitan Corporate Counsel, Andrew Sherman and Boris Mankovetskiy amplify this theme by asking, “Is Bankruptcy The Cure For Distressed Hospitals?”  They point out the inherent limitations and difficulties of using a bankruptcy filing to cure a financially ailing hospital, and suggest that other options (debt restructuring, strategic alliance or sale) will often yield a better result.
          The governing boards of New Jersey\’s financially troubled nonprofit hospitals have the duty and the authority to assure that their hospitals\’ missions are fulfilled.  That means doing something other than “flying them into the side of a mountain” (a phrase favored by one of my former partners), and then handing the keys to a bankruptcy judge.  We can only hope that they will seize the opportunity to determine their own fate.