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Minnesota has a reputation for excellent health care. It is emblematic of our core values. Simply put, Minnesotans care about their neighbors. We are rightly proud of that.
We have also been proud of our nonprofit health sector, where patients and care came first and profitability came second. However, in recent years our nonprofit health sector has changed. Increasingly, we see our health care organizations focused on profits, with illness viewed as a business opportunity and patients as capitation units. Our vaunted system is eroding.
Sadly, some nonprofit HMOs ("health maintenance organizations") now behave just like their brethren in the for-profit sector. They raise premiums and deductibles to unaffordable levels and go to great lengths to avoid paying for care that the doctor orders and the patient needs. The same is true in health care delivery, where large health care systems make so many decisions focused on the bottom line instead of the needs of the population they serve.
The current proposal for Sanford of South Dakota to merge with Fairview has the potential to accelerate this process. Fairview, a trusted Minnesota nonprofit, would be no more. The new company would be called "Sanford," with headquarters in Sioux Falls, potentially beyond the reach of Minnesota's laws and regulators.
For several years, Sanford has angled to become a larger player. Its proposed merger with Intermountain Health System, serving Utah, Nevada and Idaho, failed to be consummated. A more recent effort to join with Unity Health Care, serving Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin, also derailed. The common element in these proposals was that Sanford would lead the new entity, as is the case with the current proposal. Even though the current proposal includes retaining the current Fairview president for a year in a support role and keeping Fairview's board, it is clear Sanford will be leading the organization.
Sanford claims it will provide greater access to high-quality, equitable health care, accelerate population health and value-based care, and drive clinical innovation for the benefit of rural, urban and Indigenous communities across the Midwest. Who could be against such worthy aspirations?