Financial pressures are forcing North Memorial Health to eliminate 103 jobs as well as outpatient mental health services at its flagship hospital.
Officials say the health system is struggling at its Robbinsdale medical center with continued growth in patients covered by government-sponsored health plans, which pay less for services than commercial health insurers.
In addition, North Memorial Health learned earlier this year that Hennepin County is eliminating a $22 million subsidy that helped cover expenses during 2023.
The health system says it will work with about 3,400 current mental health patients to find new outpatient providers between now and Aug. 30, which is the expected close date. This reduction comes as demand for these mental health services has grown in recent years.
North Memorial is also planning to eliminate its level-two neonatal intensive care unit in Robbinsdale, which means the hospital’s nursery will be staffed and equipped only for newborns with normal deliveries.
“We’re truly at a point where we’re struggling to survive the headwinds that are facing all of health care, but more importantly survive the payer mix that we serve here in Robbinsdale,” Trevor Sawallish, North Memorial chief executive, said in an interview. “And it’s reaching a critical point.”
The share of inpatients covered by lower-paying Medicare and Medicaid government insurance programs is significantly higher at the Robbinsdale hospital, Sawallish said, than the statewide average. North Memorial’s Maple Grove community hospital, meanwhile, had the highest share of commercial insurance coverage of any hospital in Minnesota in 2022, according to state Health Department data.
Commercial insurers are thought to provide the highest reimbursement rates, in general, to health care providers. Medicare payments typically are lower, hospitals say, followed by rates from Medicaid and related state-federal programs for lower-income residents.