Mayo Clinic is cutting pay for about one-third of its workers — more than 20,000 people — as the financial fallout of COVID-19 spreads to the state's largest employer and one of the nation's marquee medical centers.
Hospitals and clinics across the state have implemented furloughs and diminished clinic hours in recent weeks as they have halted elective surgeries and procedures to conserve supplies for an expected surge of COVID-19 patients. At Mayo Clinic, officials said the actions have slashed revenue by more than 50%.
Last month, the Rochester-based health system trimmed costs by reducing contract employees and pausing construction projects, but found it was still facing a projected loss of $3 billion by year-end. Despite the economic pain, Mayo Clinic's chief executive said he supports steps being taken by the state to control the spread including the extension this week of a stay-at-home order.
"Our ability to flatten the curve of impact allows our health systems to be better prepared with emerging treatment protocols and ensures that we have the equipment and facilities available to treat patients when they need it," Gianrico Farrugia, Mayo Clinic's chief executive, said in a statement to the Star Tribune.
Mayo Clinic is Minnesota's largest nonprofit group with hospitals and clinics across five states. Its systemwide workforce of nearly 70,000 includes more than 40,000 in Minnesota.
In March, an order from Gov. Tim Walz indefinitely postponed all nonessential or elective surgeries and procedures as a means of conserving needed medical supplies such as masks and gowns for health care workers.
At that point, Mayo anticipated delays in those surgeries for four to six weeks, thinking the peak in COVID-19 patients might come in late April or early May, said Jeff Bolton, the chief administrative officer at Mayo.
Now, models suggest the peak might not come until June or July, Bolton said, although he added, "Once you get beyond two weeks, there's a huge variance in the predictability."