Fairview Health is seeking partners to preserve some medical care at St. Joseph's Hospital, particularly its mental health care, despite the health system's multimillion-dollar shortfalls, which led its leaders to consider closing the St. Paul facility.
Opposition to the closure of St. Joseph's compelled James Hereford, Fairview chief executive, to consider alternatives, although he said the health system would need support and investment from other community, medical and social service groups that have an interest in keeping the hospital open.
"There is a shared interest here," he said Wednesday.
Critics of Fairview's closure discussions, announced last fall, had increased in recent weeks to include the Minnesota Nurses Association and a group of St. Paul City Council leaders. Others criticized Fairview for a partnership with the University of Minnesota that they said cost the health system millions of dollars and pressured it into considering the closure in the first place.
Fairview went from an operating income of $86 million in 2018 to a $96 million loss in 2019 — with another loss projected this year.
One person closely involved with Fairview's negotiations with the U said that terms of their new partnership in 2018 committed Fairview to an estimated $80 million per year in additional spending on the U's academic physicians.
"That $80 million-plus gap in additional costs is huge when your margin is only $100 million in good years," said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Closing St. Joseph's was just one solution that emerged when Fairview and U leaders met in fall 2019 to address the health system's budget problems.