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Bankrupt Chicago Hospital Gets the Chance to Stay Open With a Sale

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Trinity Health Corp. has agreed to sell Chicago’s Mercy Hospital and Medical Center to a Flint, Michigan-based biomedical company that will keep the facility running, Bloomberg News reported. Insight, the potential buyer that intends to operate the facility as a full-service acute care hospital, is filing paperwork for the change of ownership with the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board, according to a statement from the company. The agreement is non-binding and final terms will be negotiated in the coming weeks, according to a statement from Mercy. “If the acquisition meets state regulatory approval, Insight plans to operate a community-based hospital that will serve patients from Bronzeville, Chicago’s South Side and the city of Chicago,” Jawad Shah, chief executive officer of Insight, said in the company’s statement. “We are committed to a thoughtful community engagement process to ensure access to care for Chicago’s diverse populations while achieving financial solvency.” The pandemic has exacerbated the financial struggles of many U.S. hospitals, including Mercy. Costs from treating COVID-19 patients have soared, and hospitals had to curtail profitable elective procedures. The proposed sale comes after Mercy Hospital filed for bankruptcy last month and Illinois health officials rejected plans by Mercy’s owner, Trinity, to close the 258-bed medical center and open an outpatient center on Chicago’s South Side. Read more.

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