Tenet DMC Charity Care Report
Tenet DMC Charity Care Report
Tenet DMC Charity Care Report
at Tenet DMC
How a Dallas-based company abandoned its
commitment to charity health care in Detroit
March 2018
Executive Summary:
Executives at Dallas‐based Tenet Healthcare, the owners of Detroit Medical Center (DMC), have decided
to reduce their spending on charity care in Detroit‐area acute care hospital facilities to near zero – a 98
percent reduction since Tenet purchased DMC in 2013.1
This near elimination of care for the indigent is a clear violation of legal commitments made by Tenet at
the time of their purchase of Vanguard Health System (which then owned DMC) in 2013.2 It is a far
greater reduction than peer Detroit‐area institutions during the same time period.
According to figures reported to the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services, Tenet DMC spent just
$470,000 on charity care in Detroit‐area acute care hospitals in 2016. By contrast, Beaumont Health
spent more than $26 million and Henry Ford Health Systems spend more than $19 million.
The decision by Dallas‐based executives to make charity care nearly unavailable at one of the Detroit
area’s largest operators of acute care hospitals has potentially grave consequences for the city’s most
vulnerable residents.3 At present, some 7.4 percent of Detroit’s 673,000 residents do not have health
insurance – almost 50,000 people.4 These 50,000 people, many of them low‐income or indigent, are
now virtually shut out from Tenet DMC. 5
Between 2013 and 2016 Tenet DMC reduced its charity care spending in acute care hospital facilities
from more than $22 million to less than a million dollars per year.6 Tenet DMC is now spending just a
few hundred dollars per bed on care for the indigent.7 This is in sharp contrast to its peer Detroit‐area
institutions8, Henry Ford Health System and Beaumont Health, that are still spending millions per year
and thousands per bed in acute hospital facilities to provide care to those who cannot afford it.
With bipartisan support for expansion of health insurance in Michigan under terms of the Affordable
Care Act (ACA), hospitals and health care systems now see many fewer uninsured patients and spending
on charity care has been reduced in the Detroit area and throughout Michigan.9
1
See Table 1 for charity care spending by Detroit‐area health systems; also see page 10 for methodology.
2 Attorney General Mike Cox, “Report on the Proposed Sale of the Detroit Medical Center Hospital Businesses to Vanguard
Health Systems, Inc.” November 13, 2010. The DMC Legacy Board was created during the Vanguard acquisition in 2010 to
“oversee Vanguard's contractual commitments and develop an asset transfer agreement to help fund two charitable
foundations that will manage DMC's estimated $140 million in charitable contributions.”
Attorney General, “Legacy DMC's Letter Reporting on Compliance with Monitoring Responsibilities,” June 9,2016 available at
http://www.michigan.gov/documents/ag/Legacy_DMCs_Letter_Confirming_Compliance_wiht_Corporate_Structure_Requirem
ents_and_List_of_Legacy_DMC_Board_of_Directors_526752_7.pdf; also see Cision PR Newswire, “Joseph Walsh Named CEO of
DMC Legacy Board,” Jan. 20, 2011
https://www.prnewswire.com/news‐releases/joseph‐walsh‐named‐ceo‐of‐dmc‐legacy‐board‐114288534.html.
For list of Post‐Closing Covenants see Michigan.gov, “Article 12: Post‐Closing Covenants of Buyer,” available at
http://www.michigan.gov/documents/ag/Attachment_1_‐_Article_12_‐_Post‐Closing_Covenants_of_Buyer_2_526746_7.pdf.
3 Id.
4 US News, “Census Figures Show Drop in Detroit Poverty Rate,” Sept. 14, 2017 https://www.usnews.com/news/best‐
states/michigan/articles/2017‐09‐14/census‐figures‐show‐drop‐in‐detroit‐poverty‐rate.
5
Id.
6 Graph 1
7 Id.
8 Peer health systems include Beaumont Health and Henry Ford Health System.
9 A recent University of Michigan study found that “[f]or the 88 hospitals that have reported a full year's worth of data from the
post‐expansion era—62 percent of all hospitals in Michigan—the amount dropped by about half overall. Not all of the hospitals
1
However, the 98 percent reduction in charity care spending at acute care hospital facilities by Tenet
DMC between 2013 and 2016 is far greater than the 66 percent reduction in uninsured residents in the
city of Detroit achieved through implementation of the Affordable Care Act over the same period.10 It is
also far greater than the reduction in charity care spending at peer Detroit‐area institutions Beaumont
Health (67 percent) and Henry Ford Health Systems (65 percent).
The facts outlined in this report – based on Tenet DMC’s own submissions to Medicare – show that
Tenet DMC has failed to live up to its commitment to provide charity care to Detroit’s indigent
population.
saw such a large drop, but more than 90 percent of hospitals reporting data from 2015 saw a decline in the percentage of their
total expenses that came from uncompensated care.” See University of Michigan News, “Unpaid bills, charity care dropped by
nearly half at Michigan hospitals soon after Medicaid expanded,” Jan. 30, 2017,
http://ns.umich.edu/new/multimedia/videos/24504‐unpaid‐bills‐charity‐care‐dropped‐by‐nearly‐half‐at‐michigan‐hospitals‐
soon‐after‐medicaid‐expanded; Also see Crain’s Detroit Business, “Report: Uncompensated Care in Michigan Declined by 55
Under Obamacare, July 25, 2017 http://www.crainsdetroit.com/article/20170725/blog010/634776/report‐uncompensated‐
care‐in‐michigan‐declined‐by‐56‐under‐obamacare; Also see Census.gov, “Health Insurance Coverage in the United States:
2016,“ Sept. 2017 available at https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2017/demo/p60‐260.pdf.
10
Vox, “How Obamacare Saved Detroit,” July 25, 2017 https://www.vox.com/policy‐and‐
politics/2017/7/25/16001508/obamacare‐detroit‐medicaid‐repeal.
2
1. From 2013 to 2016, Tenet DMC executives slashed the amount of charity care they provided in
Detroit‐area acute hospital facilities by 98 percent, to near zero.
Michigan Governor Rick Snyder signed Medicaid expansion into law in September 201311, under terms
of the federal Affordable Care Act, and expansion took effect in April 2014.12 In subsequent years,
hospitals and health care systems are seeing far fewer uninsured patients and spending on charity care
has been reduced in the Detroit area and across the state.13
The Dallas‐based executives of Tenet DMC, however, stand alone in their decision to reduce charity to
near zero – a 98 percent reduction.14 Tenet DMC is betraying its commitment, made in writing at the
time of its acquisition of Vanguard Health Systems, to continue to serve Detroit’s indigent
population.15
Table 1.
Charity Care Costs, 2013‐2016
Detroit‐area acute care hospitals; Systems with over 1,000 beds
(figures in millions)
% Reduction
2013 2016 2013‐16
Tenet DMC $22.9 $0.47 ‐98%
Beaumont Health $79.8 $26.6 ‐67%
Henry Ford Health System $55.7 $19.3 ‐65%
Source: Form CMS‐2552‐10, Worksheet S‐10‐ Hospital Uncompensated and Indigent Data for FY‐2013 and FY‐2016, cms.gov
11 Michigan.gov, “Gov. Snyder signs Healthy Michigan into law, bringing health care to 470,000 Michiganders,” Sept. 16, 2013,
see http://www.michigan.gov/snyder/0,4668,7‐277‐61409_61412‐312514‐‐,00.html.
12 Health Affairs, “The Medicaid Expansion Experience in Michigan,” Aug. 28, 2015, see
https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hblog20150828.050226/full/.
13 US News, “Census Figures Show Drop in Detroit Poverty Rate,” Sept. 14, 2017 https://www.usnews.com/news/best‐
states/michigan/articles/2017‐09‐14/census‐figures‐show‐drop‐in‐detroit‐poverty‐rate.
14 Graph 1
15
Attorney General Mike Cox, “Report on the Proposed Sale of the Detroit Medical Center Hospital Businesses to Vanguard
Health Systems, Inc.” November 13, 2010. The DMC Legacy Board was created during the Vanguard acquisition in 2010 to
“oversee Vanguard's contractual commitments and develop an asset transfer agreement to help fund two charitable
foundations that will manage DMC's estimated $140 million in charitable contributions.” see Attorney General, “Legacy DMC's
Letter Reporting on Compliance with Monitoring Responsibilities,” June 9,2016 available at
http://www.michigan.gov/documents/ag/Legacy_DMCs_Letter_Confirming_Compliance_wiht_Corporate_Structure_Requirem
ents_and_List_of_Legacy_DMC_Board_of_Directors_526752_7.pdf; also see Cision PR Newswire, “Joseph Walsh Named CEO of
DMC Legacy Board,” Jan. 20, 2011
https://www.prnewswire.com/news‐releases/joseph‐walsh‐named‐ceo‐of‐dmc‐legacy‐board‐114288534.html.
3
Graph 1.
Charity Care Cost Decrease
(2013‐2016)
0%
‐20%
‐40%
‐60%
Beaumont Henry Ford
‐80% Health Health System
‐67% ‐65%
‐100%
Tenet DMC Detroit‐area acute care hospitals,
‐98% systems with over 1,000 beds
‐120%
Source: Form CMS‐2552‐10, Worksheet S‐10‐ Hospital Uncompensated and Indigent Data for FY‐2013 and FY‐2016, cms.gov
Beaumont Health, Henry Ford Health Systems and Tenet DMC are the largest health care providers in
the Detroit area. They are the only three organizations in the Detroit area which operate more than
1,000 beds in acute care facilities.
Even after across‐the‐board reductions due to Medicaid expansion, Henry Ford and Beaumont are still
spending thousands per bed on care for the indigent.16 But Tenet DMC has now reduced its spending to
just a few hundred per bed for indigent patients – the lowest spending, by far, of any large Detroit‐area
health care provider.17
16 Table 1
17 Data for bed size is from 2016 Medicare Cost Reports. CMS.gov
4
Graph 2.
Charity Care Cost per Bed, 2013‐2016
Detroit‐area acute care hospitals,
systems with over 1,000 beds
$45,000.00
$40,000.00
$35,000.00
$30,000.00
$25,000.00
$20,000.00
$15,000.00
$10,000.00
$5,000.00
$0.00
Henry Ford Health System Beaumont Health Tenet DMC
2013 $38,422.41 $26,315.15 $22,307.97
2016 $13,292.68 $8,752.69 $454.43
2013 2016
Source: Form CMS‐2552‐10, Worksheet S‐10‐ Hospital Uncompensated and Indigent Data for FY‐2013 through FY‐2016, cms.gov
2. Charity care is critical for Detroit
Detroit is the sixth poorest city in the nation, with a median household income of just over $28,000.18
Charity care from area hospitals has historically been an important part of an essential safety net for
Detroit residents.19 Thanks to bipartisan support for expansion of health care in Michigan, Detroit
reduced its proportion of uninsured residents from 22 percent in 2013 to just 7.4 percent in 2016.20 This
is a 66 percent reduction – which almost exactly matches the reduction in charity care spending at
Henry Ford (65 percent) and Beaumont (67 percent). It is far less, however, than the 98 percent
reduction at Tenet DMC facilities. 21
Tenet DMC, Beaumont, Henry Ford and Trinity Health all operate hospitals and draw patients from
outside the city of Detroit, so there may be additional factors involved in the reduction in charity care
18 MLive.com, “See Richest, Poorest U.S. Cities and Counties Based on Census Data,” Sept. 20, 2017,
http://www.mlive.com/news/index.ssf/2017/09/see_richest_poorest_us_cities.html.
19 Attorney General Mike Cox, “Report on the Proposed Sale of the Detroit Medical Center Hospital Businesses to Vanguard
Health Systems, Inc.” November 13, 2010.
20 Vox, “How Obamacare Saved Detroit,” July 25, 2017 https://www.vox.com/policy‐and‐
politics/2017/7/25/16001508/obamacare‐detroit‐medicaid‐repeal.
21See Table 1, p. 3 and Graph 1, p. 4.
5
spending. However, Tenet’s almost complete elimination of charity care spending in acute care hospitals
is unique among large Detroit‐area hospital systems.
The 7.4 percent of Detroit’s population of 693,000 residents without health insurance represents almost
50,000 people.22 These residents – many of whom are low‐income or indigent – are now almost entirely
shut out of Tenet DMC.
Although Tenet DMC is now a private, for‐profit company, Tenet purchased a former non‐profit hospital
chain in 2013 and at that time agreed, in writing, to continue a practice of providing “significant levels of
care for indigent and low‐income patients.”23 But this spending has now been reduced to near zero, in
contrast with peer institutions.24
3. Tenet is violating its written commitment to provide charity care in Detroit
Vanguard Health Systems took over DMC in 2010, converting a long‐standing non‐profit network of
community‐based hospitals into a for‐profit health system.25 To preserve its legacy of “providing health
care services to nearly one million people annually and serving a disproportionate share of the indigent,
uninsured, and underinsured” population, the state Attorney General created a community agreement
to bind Vanguard Health Systems to DMC’s charity care policy as a condition of sale.26
In 2013, Tenet Healthcare, a Dallas‐based company, purchased Vanguard Health Systems and
“acknowledged its obligation to fulfill the commitments established in the [Purchase and Sales
Agreement] as conditions of the sale of the Detroit Medical Center.”27 Included in these conditions was
the promise to maintain DMC’s charity care policies to provide “significant levels of care for indigent and
low‐income patients…”28
Tenet DMC is bound for 10 years after closing the sale to adhere to DMC’s charity care policy29 – but just
three years after its 2013 purchase, Tenet is clearly violating the terms of sale.30
Tenet DMC is also obligated to meet five requirements to prominently publish:
22 US News, “Census Figures Show Drop in Detroit Poverty Rate,” Sept. 14, 2017 https://www.usnews.com/news/best‐
states/michigan/articles/2017‐09‐14/census‐figures‐show‐drop‐in‐detroit‐poverty‐rate.
23 Mike Cox, “Report on the Proposed Sale of the Detroit Medical Center Hospital Businesses to Vanguard Health Systems, Inc.”
November 13, 2010.
24 Table 1; Graph 1
25 DMC acquisition was completed December 31, 2010. See U.S. Securities and Exchange Comm., Form 8‐K, Jan. 5, 2011
available at https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1045829/000104582911000002/jan062011_8k.htm.
26 Mike Cox, “Report on the Proposed Sale of the Detroit Medical Center Hospital Businesses to Vanguard Health Systems, Inc.”
November 13, 2010.
27 Legacy DMC letter to Mr. William R. Bloomfield June 9, 2016. For list of Post‐Closing Covenants see Michigan.gov, “Article 12:
Post‐Closing Covenants of Buyer,” available at http://www.michigan.gov/documents/ag/Attachment_1_‐_Article_12_‐_Post‐
Closing_Covenants_of_Buyer_2_526746_7.pdf.
28 Section 12.2 of the Post Closing Covenants of Buyer. Article 12 of the Purchase and Sales Agreement includes 20 Post‐Closing
Covenants that outline specific terms that Tenet Healthcare/DMC must abide by to meet its charity care policy. Id; See also U.S.
Securities and Exchange Comm., “Exhibit 2.1‐ Amendment No.2 to Purchase and Sale Agreement,” available at
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1045829/000104582910000033/exhibit2_1.htm.
29 Id.
30 “It is incumbent on Legacy DMC to exercise its mandate to enforce Vanguard’s covenant maintaining the policy of charity and
indigent care. It is a reality that dollars spent and patient volumes will fluctuate over the course of ten years; thus, Legacy DMC
must be vigilant in focusing on preserving the standard of charity care provided.” Mike Cox, “Report on the Proposed Sale of
the Detroit Medical Center Hospital Businesses to Vanguard Health Systems, Inc.” November 13, 2010 (20).
6
the availability of its financial assistance to uninsured and underinsured patients;
the availability of assistance for Medicaid coverage;
access to a patient‐care ombudsman or hotline to facilitate resolution of billing and treatment
issues;
patient’s rights; and
its debt collection policy.31
4. Tenet Healthcare/DMC’s lagging contribution to Detroit’s indigent population is increasing the
share of costs paid by other health systems
The Attorney General’s approval letter for the sale of DMC to Vanguard Health Systems in 2010
emphasizes the essential role that DMC plays in providing services for indigent populations.32 Yet the
data reported by Tenet DMC in Medicare cost reports indicate how far the Dallas‐based company has
strayed from its written promise to provide charity care.
Graph 3.
Charity Care Costs 2013
Acute Care Hospitals in Detroit Area; Systems with over 1,000 beds
15%
50%
35%
31 DMC.org, “Section 12.2 Indigent and Low Income Care of Post‐Closing Covenants of Buyer,”
https://www.dmc.org/for‐patients/insurance‐financial‐support/financial‐assistance‐program
32 “The reliance of indigent patients on DMC’s hospitals for quality health‐care services cannot be overstated. DMC is also the
largest employer in Detroit and provides training resources for future physicians, nurses, and other health‐care professionals. It
is essential that DMC continue to operate.” Mike Cox, “Report on the Proposed Sale of the Detroit Medical Center Hospital
Businesses to Vanguard Health Systems, Inc.” November 13, 2010.
7
Graph 4.
Charity Care Costs 2016
Acute Care Facilities in Detroit Area,
Systems with more than 1,000 beds
1%
57%
42%
Because Tenet DMC has failed to live up to their commitment to DMC’s charity care policy in Detroit,
their peer health systems are now bearing the burden of providing charity care.33 In 2013, Tenet DMC
contributed 15 percent of the charity care costs in the larger Detroit area, among health systems
operating acute care hospitals with more than 1,000 beds.34 In 2016, this plummeted to a mere 1
percent share charity care costs among these major Detroit‐area health systems.35 Tenet DMC’s
competitors, Beaumont Health and Henry Ford Health System – even though their own spending has
33 Graph 3; Graph 4
34 Graph 3
35 Graph 4
8
been reduced – are now paying a much larger share of charity care costs, essentially picked up the tab
left by Tenet.36
Beaumont Health is now paying 57 percent of charity costs among Detroit area health systems operating
more than 1,000 beds in acute care facilities, up from 50 percent in 2013.37 Henry Ford Health Systems
is now paying 42 percent of costs, up from 35 percent in 2013.38
5. Recommendations
As the body enforcing the community agreement, we urge the DMC Legacy Board to:
Obligate Tenet DMC to create and pay into a trust the difference between what Tenet DMC
paid in charity care and the regional average. These funds should be used to provide free
care to uninsured patients in the Detroit area, overseen by the Legacy Board.
Investigate the reasons behind the stark 98 percent decrease in Tenet DMC’s spending on
charity care for the indigent Detroit population from 2013 to 2016.
Make public Tenet DMC’s charity care policies, expenditures, and related data39;
Provide patients with adequate notice that charity care is available; and
Add an ombudsman position to the Legacy Board – a reputable community leader, and not
someone selected by Tenet DMC ‐‐ with a focus on ensuring compliance with spending on
charity care and other commitments.
As documented by Tenet DMC’s own reports to Medicare, Dallas‐based executives have failed to meet
their binding commitments to provide charity care in Detroit. It is now up to the Legacy Board, elected
officials, and the public to hold Tenet DMC accountable to the promises they made to the community
when they purchased the Detroit Medical Center hospitals.
6. Methodology
Charity care data is derived from annual reports obtained from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (“CMS”). Medicare cost reports are filed annually by acute care hospital facilities and added
into a Healthcare Cost Report Information System (“HCRIS”). Hospital facilities report uncompensated
care, bad debt, and charity care according to specific information required in Form CMS‐2552‐10,
Worksheet S‐10 Hospital Uncompensated and Indigent Data. For this report, data for Detroit‐area
36 Graph 3; Graph 4
37 Id.
38 Id.
39 “Tenet has classified the charity care and bad debt expense information in the VHS Report as confidential.” Legacy DMC letter
to Mr. William R. Bloomfield, June 9, 2016, (2).
9
facilities were obtained from Medicare cost reports from 2013 to 2016 and totaled for the hospital and
health care systems under review.40
Beaumont Health, Henry Ford Health Systems and Tenet DMC were chosen because they are the largest
hospital systems in the Detroit area, each operating more than 1,000 beds in acute care facilities. Tenet
DMC and Henry Ford Health Systems also operate Detroit‐area hospitals which do not meet the
Medicare definition of acute care facilities and are not required to report charity care data.
40 ResDAC, “Medicare Hospital Cost Reports: Uncompensated Care,” Nov. 7, 2017
https://www.resdac.org/resconnect/articles/132; see also Cost Report Data, “Form CMS‐2552‐10,”
https://www.costreportdata.com/instructions/Instr_S100.pdf.
10
Appendix
Charity Care Data, 2013‐2016
Detroit‐area Acute Care Hospitals, Systems with More Than 1,000 Beds
CMS
IDPK Hospital Name System City Beds 2013 2016
Beaumont Hospital ‐
230020 Dearborn Beaumont Health DEARBORN 632 $21,208,695 $4,752,945
Beaumont Hospital ‐ GROSSE
230089 Grosse Pointe Beaumont Health POINTE 220 $4,792,257 $2,413,633
Beaumont Hospital ‐
230130 Royal Oak Beaumont Health ROYAL OAK 976 $22,809,426 $9,964,752
Beaumont Hospital ‐
230142 Wayne Beaumont Health WAYNE 170 $3,569,115 $293,810
Beaumont Hospital ‐ FARMINGTON
230151 Farmington Hills Beaumont Health HILLS 256 $4,082,241 $2,417,092
Beaumont Hospital ‐
230176 Trenton Beaumont Health TRENTON 186 $3,860,588 $907,108
230269 Beaumont Hospital ‐ Troy Beaumont Health TROY 495 $11,991,476 $4,461,310
Beaumont Hospital ‐
230270 Taylor Beaumont Health TAYLOR 99 $7,526,377 $1,344,999
Totals 3034 $79,840,175 $26,555,649
Henry Ford Macomb Henry Ford Health
230047 Hospitals ‐ Clinton Twp System MT. CLEMENS 321 $5,350,310 $1,312,318
Henry Ford Health
230053 Henry Ford Hospital System DETROIT 677 $45,966,309 $14,966,729
Henry Ford Wyandotte Henry Ford Health
230146 Hospital System WYANDOTTE 261 $3,671,662 $2,453,745
Henry Ford West Henry Ford Health
230302 Bloomfield Hospital System DETROIT 191 $724,220 $541,596
Totals 1450 $55,712,501 $19,274,388
230024 DMC Sinai‐Grace Hospital TENET DMC DETROIT 345 $8,311,306 $225,206
DMC Harper University
230104 Hospital TENET DMC DETROIT 352 $2,756,203 $56,952
DMC Detroit Receiving
230273 Hospital TENET DMC DETROIT 203 $11,099,494 $151,799
DMC Huron Valley‐Sinai COMMERCE
230277 Hospital TENET DMC TOWNSHIP 128 $765,595 $33,202
Totals 1028 $22,932,598 $467,159
Source: Form CMS‐2552‐10, Worksheet S‐10‐ Hospital Uncompensated and Indigent Data for FY‐2013 and FY‐2016, cms.gov
11