An attorney consulting on the future of academic medicine at the University of Minnesota is casting doubts over whether Fairview Health Services is a viable long-term partner.
Consultant Cliff Stromberg's concerns arise from what he described as the health system's relative lack of prestige along with a history of financial problems.
In comments this month to the Board of Regents, Stromberg said the U should own or control its teaching hospital within a larger health system that "embraces" the university's academic medicine mission. Currently, Minneapolis-based Fairview owns the University of Minnesota Medical Center and has said its current level of financial support to the U is not sustainable.
Stromberg didn't directly say whether the future health system partner should continue to be Fairview or could instead be Fairview's proposed merger partner Sanford Health, which is based in South Dakota.
But Fairview's financial problems might limit its support for academic medicine, Stromberg suggested, and thereby hurt the U's ability to recruit top physicians and maintain recent improvements in its medical school ranking.
"We can't say 'Well, our health care partner isn't profitable, so we can't pay you what the University of Wisconsin was' to a faculty member that we're trying to recruit," he said during a board retreat this month in Victoria.
"It is very hard for medical schools to maintain a top ranking without a hospital partner that's in a similar range," Stromberg said at another point in the meeting. "... The number of medical specialties in which Fairview is ranked nationally is zero. And that's not a new experience. ... So, we have this disjunction between how well [the University is] doing and how well Fairview is doing."
In a statement Tuesday to the Star Tribune, the U said it "would not be right to say that the University has doubts about the future of a partnership with Fairview."