Private equity reduces patient care while enriching investors, Senate report finds
The Senate investigation of Apollo Global Management's purchase of Lifepoint Healthcare and Leonard Green & Partners' purchase of Prospect Medical Holdings reinforced the findings of past research.
A yearlong bipartisan congressional investigation into two private equity-backed U.S. hospital systems found that patient care deteriorated at both operations as their private equity owners reaped significant payouts on their investments in the systems. The findings reinforced academic research showing how private equity health care investments harm patients while enriching investors.
The investigation was helmed by two senators who lead the Senate Budget Committee — Sheldon Whitehouse, a Rhode Island Democrat, and Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican.
The inquiry centered on private equity giant Apollo Global Management, owner of Lifepoint Healthcare, the nation’s largest operator of rural hospitals, and Leonard Green & Partners, a private equity firm in Los Angeles that owned hospitals under the Prospect Medical Holdings umbrella from 2010 to 2021.
Over the past decade, private-equity firms like Apollo and Leonard Green have spent more than $1 trillion buying health care businesses, including hospitals, nursing homes, physician practices and hospital staffing companies. To finance these deals, private equity owners typically burden the companies they buy with debt, then slash company costs to increase earnings and appeal to potential buyers in subsequent years. Because private equity firms do not make public the financial results of the companies they own, Senate investigators aimed to assess how much profit the private equity firms generated from their investments in the hospitals and whether the deals harmed patients.
“As our investigation revealed, these financial entities are putting their own profits over patients, leading to health and safety violations, chronic understaffing, and hospital closures,” Whitehouse said in a statement. “Private equity investors have pocketed millions while driving hospitals into the ground and then selling them off, leaving towns and communities to pick up the pieces.”
Rating: 5