CEO, For Profit Steward Health Care Defies Subpoena, Nurses Testify, Horrors of Private Equity Hospital
'As Steward CEO Defies Subpoena, Nurses Testify to Horrors of Private Equity Hospitals.'
The "courage" of healthcare workers, said Sen. Ed Markey, was "matched only by Dr. de la Torre's cowardice." Common Dreams, 9.12.24.
-----
The obscenely rich CEO of Steward Health Care, a for-profit network formed with private equity backing, violated a subpoena on Thursday by declining to testify at a Senate hearing on how mismanagement of the now-bankrupt hospital system harmed patient care.
But in Ralph de la Torre's absence, members of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee did hear from nurses who witnessed firsthand how Steward's prioritization of shareholder payouts and lavish executive compensation left its hospitals in dire straights, with badly insufficient staffing and resources. Ellen MacInnis, a longtime nurse at St. Elizabeth's Medical Center in Boston, said in response to a question from Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) that hospital conditions are "noticeably different" under private equity ownership.
"After Steward took over," said MacInnis, the hospital began "violating agreements" it made with nurses and "laid off all the nursing assistants on our maternity floors." When Murphy said that "the purpose" of hospitals under Steward's ownership was apparently to "make the owners filthy rich," MacInnis responded, "Yes, absolutely." Earlier in her testimony, MacInnis offered what she described as an "egregious and appalling example" of the incompetence and cruelty of Steward's management:
"The failure of Steward to ensure a supply of bereavement boxes, which are the cases used to carry the remains of deceased newborns to the morgue."
"Instead, staff were expected to transport these remains in banker's and shipping boxes," said MacInnis. "To compensate for this indignity it was left to our own nurses to go online and purchase appropriate containers on Amazon." The "most tragic example," MacInnis said, was the death of a 39-year-old mother "simply because the embolism coil that would have saved her life had been repossessed by another unpaid vender."...Read More
Watch the full hearing:
- Sen. Bernie Sanders leads Senate HELP Committe hearing on Impacts of Steward Health Care Bankruptcy. Sept.12, 2024.
READ MORE:
https://www.commondreams.org/news/steward-health-care-private-equity
- As The American Prospect's Maureen Tkacik noted last week, Steward "entered bankruptcy with $8 billion in debt while its CEO siphoned out more than a quarter-billion dollars and blew most of it on an epic midlife crisis, featuring a new wife 29 years his junior, a 500-acre ranch for her prizewinning racehorses, a $77,000-a-month detail for her security while traveling between the couples far-flung mansions, an Amalfi Coast wedding choreographed by Gwen Stefani and Blake Sheltons wedding planner, and not one but two yachts."
Just ahead of Thursday's hearing, The Wall Street Journal reported that Steward paid out $790 million in dividends to shareholders years before filing for bankruptcy...
SheltieLover
(59,617 posts)If it is legal, why the fuck is it?
appalachiablue
(42,908 posts)Wiki. - Private equity (PE) is capital stock in a private company that does not offer stock to the general public. In the field of finance, private equity is offered instead to specialized investment funds and limited partnerships that take an active role in the management and structuring of the companies. In casual usage, "private equity" can refer to these investment firms rather than the companies that they invest in.
Private-equity capital is invested into a target company either by an investment management company (private equity firm), a venture capital fund, or an angel investor; each category of investor has specific financial goals, management preferences, and investment strategies for profiting from their investments. Private equity provides working capital to the target company to finance the expansion of the company with the development of new products and services, restructuring of operations, management, and formal control and ownership of the company.
As a financial product, the private-equity fund is a type of private capital for financing a long-term investment strategy in an illiquid business enterprise. Private equity fund investing has been described by the financial press as the superficial rebranding of investment management companies who specialized in the leveraged buyout of financially weak companies...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_equity
SheltieLover
(59,617 posts)And that those responsible rot in prison, then in hell.
appalachiablue
(42,908 posts)SheltieLover
(59,617 posts)Especially by way of rethugs taking money from pootin to destroy our country.
But venture capitalists are almost as bad. They are sickening!
I wish there were a way to outlaw what they are doing.
orthoclad
(4,728 posts)Money talks.
(from an old Shoe cartoon)
appalachiablue
(42,908 posts)(Cross - Post from LBN, Sept. 13, 2024).
------
- 'Senators expected to hold Steward Health Care CEO Ralph de la Torre in contempt,'
Source: CBS News, Updated on: Sept.12, 2024
-----
Lawmakers will vote to hold Steward Health Care CEO Ralph de la Torre in contempt of Congress next week after he declined to appear at a hearing Thursday on Capitol Hill where he was subpoenaed to testify. "If someone shows contempt for the people of the United States by not coming to testify both to potentially clear his name, but also to give them insight, then that is a contemptible thing," Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, the ranking Republican member of the Senate committee investigating Steward, told CBS News ahead of Thursday's hearing.
The company, which had owned more than three dozen hospitals across eight states, declared bankruptcy earlier this year and has been struggling to find buyers for its facilities. Last week, de la Torre's attorney wrote to the committee, saying his client would "not participate" in the hearing, asserting the testimony needed to be postponed until after Steward's bankruptcy proceedings were resolved.
The committee's chairman, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, refused to postpone the hearing, where lawmakers also heard from health care workers and local officials in communities impacted by Steward's bankruptcy. or nearly two years, a CBS News investigation has documented how private equity investors and de la Torre extracted hundreds of millions of dollars while health care workers and patients struggled to get the life-saving supplies they needed.
Last month, the company closed two Massachusetts hospitals, leaving about 1,200 workers jobless, according to the state...
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143306115
dalton99a
(84,297 posts)appalachiablue
(42,908 posts)Thanks for replying.