Skip to main content

Texas Hospitals Hit Hard by Bankruptcies, Closures

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Hospital bankruptcies spiked in 2023 with 12 filings compared to a total of 11 filings in the previous three years combined. Three of those bankruptcy filings were by hospitals in Texas, with another four hospitals in the state either closing or sharing plans to close as inflation, staffing shortages and other financial headwinds continue to challenge healthcare providers, according to Becker's Hospital CFO Report. Dallas-based Steward Health Care on May 1 closed Texas Vista Medical Center in San Antonio, resulting in 827 layoffs. The 325-bed hospital was already struggling financially when Steward acquired it in 2017, and the pandemic exacerbated its losses. Traditionally, the hospital served lower-income patients; nearly 25% of its patients cannot and do not pay for medical services, according to the health system. Steward, which is trying to to sell four of its hospitals amid financial difficulties, will also close the Medical Center of Southeast Texas in Beaumont, effective Feb. 2. All care offered at the Beaumont location will be taken in by the center's Port Arthur campus. The physician-owned hospital "was severely underutilized given the needs in the region," a spokesperson for Steward told Becker's. Another Texas physician-owned hospital, West Lake Hills-based the Hospital at Westlake Medical Center, closed its emergency department on Dec. 29. The decision came three months after the hospital filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, citing significant debt that was exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. La Grange-based St. Mark's Medical Center also closed its doors Oct. 12 after unsuccessful efforts to fulfill its financial obligations. After cutting nearly half of its staff in February, the hospital converted to a rural emergency hospital designation to preserve its emergency department services and most outpatient care. However, the hospital found it could no longer sustain the $13 million of mortgage debt, as it had been paying less than the full mortgage since 2020. Lion Star LLC, the group that operates Nacogdoches Memorial Hospital, filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy in November. The filing outlines that the hospital owes as much as $50 million to creditors. At least 200 creditors have claims against Lion Star, and the largest 20 credit claims total more than $8 million.