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Some Rural Hospitals Are In Such Bad Shape, Local Governments Are Practically Giving Them Away

Kyle Kopec gets a kick out of leading tours through the run-down hospitals his boss is snapping up, pointing out what he calls relics of poor management left by a revolving door of operators.

But there’s a point to exposing their state of disrepair — the company he works for, Braden Health, is buying buildings worth millions of dollars for next to nothing. At a hospital in this rural community about a 90-minute drive northwest from Nashville, the X-ray machine is beyond repair.

“This system is so old, it’s been using a floppy disk,” said Kopec, 23, marveling at the bendy black square that hardly has enough memory to hold a single digital photo. “I’ve never actually seen a floppy disk in use. I’ve seen them in the Smithsonian.”

Not only is Kopec young, he had limited work experience in hospitals before helping lead a buying spree by Braden Health. His prior work experience includes a three-month stint as an intern in the Trump White House, on assignment through his volunteer position in the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary. He worked his way through college at Braden Health’s clinic in Ave Maria, Florida, and became a protégé of Dr. Beau Braden, the company’s founder. Now Kopec’s official title is chief compliance officer, second in command to Braden.

The hospitals Braden Health is taking over sit in one of the worst spots in one of the worst states for rural hospital closures. Tennessee has experienced 16 closures since 2010 — second only to the far more populous state of Texas, which has had at least 21 closures.

The local governments that own these facilities are finding that remarkably few companies — with any level of experience — are interested in buying them. And those that are willing don’t want to pay much, if anything.

“When you’re on the ropes or even got your head under water, it’s really difficult to negotiate with any terms of strength,” said Michael Topchik, director of the Chartis Center for Rural Health, which tracks distressed rural hospitals closely. “And so you, oftentimes, are choosing whoever is willing to choose you. At this point, large health systems have acquired or affiliated with the hospitals that have the fewest problems. And what’s left has been picked over by operators, some of which have gotten in trouble with insurers and even law enforcement for shady billing practicesYou can make it profitable. But it takes an awful lot to get there.”

Braden, an emergency room doctor and addiction specialist, used his savings and inherited wealth to get into the hospital-buying business in 2020. Previously, he tried to build a hospital in southwestern Florida, where he owns the large rural clinic in Ave Maria. After running into regulatory roadblocks, he saw more opportunity in reopening hospitals — which brought him to Tennessee.

Braden Health’s corporate headquarters has 40 employees, according to Kopec. It’s a limited liability company and privately held, so it doesn’t have to publicly share much about its financial figures. But in filings for a certificate of need that outlines why a health care facility should be allowed to operate, Braden revealed $2 million in monthly revenue from the one hospital it ran in Lexington, Tennessee, and its balance sheet showed more than $7.5 million cash on hand.

Since buying that Lexington hospital in 2020, Braden Health has signed deals for three other failing or failed hospitals and has looked at acquiring at least 10 others, mostly in Tennessee and North Carolina. Braden Health’s strategy is to build mini-networks to share staff and supplies.

At the hospital in Erin, much of the facility’s equipment is older than Kopec. And he said using outdated technology has caused Medicare to penalize the hospital with reduced payments.

The attic houses a ham radio system that seemingly never got much use, Kopec said on his way out to the roof. He wanted to show how the giant HVAC system can be controlled only from a rusty side panel accessible by a ladder. Down below, an emergency room has never been used. During a recent renovation that predated Braden Health’s ownership, its doors were built too narrow for a gurney, among other design flaws.

An old operating room is temporarily housing the ER while Braden Health starts work on new renovations. The Tennessee attorney general, who must approve any sale of a public hospital to private investors, signed off in July.

To prevent this hospital’s closure in 2013, Houston County bought it for $2.4 million and raised taxes locally to subsidize operations.

“We had no business being in the hospital business,” Mayor James Bridges said. “The majority of county governments do not have the expertise and the education and knowledge that it takes to run health care facilities in 2022.”

Those with the most experience, like big corporate hospital chains based in Nashville, have been getting out of the small hospital business, too.

Communities have seen unqualified managers come and go. In Decatur County, where Braden Health is also taking over the local hospital, the previous CEO was indicted on theft charges that remain pending. And the Tennessee comptroller determined the hospital helped endanger the finances of the entire county.

“You’re looking to someone who supposedly knows what to do, who can supposedly solve the issue. And you trust them, then you’re disappointed,” said Lori Brasher, a member of Decatur County’s economic development board. “And not disappointed once, but disappointed multiple times.”

Brasher expressed much more confidence in Braden Health, which she said has concrete plans to reopen, though the timing has been delayed by an unresolved insurance claim from a burst water line that flooded a wing of the hospital.

Local residents still have trouble stomaching the sticker price: $100 for a property valued at $1.4 million by the local tax assessor. In addition to that low price, Braden Health won tax breaks for committing to invest $2 million into the building.

The Houston County hospital is valued at $4.1 million by the property assessor. But the final sale price was just $20,000 — and that wasn’t for the land or the building. Kopec said the amount was for a 2016 ambulance with 180,000 miles — deemed the only equipment with any remaining value.

An agreement with Braden Health to take over the shuttered hospital in Haywood County, Tennessee, valued at $4.6 million, was a similarly symbolic payment. All told, Braden Health is getting more than $10 million worth of real estate for less than the price of an appendectomy.

Kopec contends the value for each property is essentially negative given that the hospitals require so much investment to comply with health care standards and — according to the company’s purchase agreements — must be run as hospitals. If not, the hospitals revert to the counties.

Most of the funding for restoring these facilities comes directly from Braden, who thinks people overestimate the value of hospitals his company is taking over.

“If you look honestly at a lot of transactions that take place with rural hospitals and how many liabilities are tied up with them, there’s really not a lot of value there,” Braden said.

Braden recently paid off a $2.3 million debt with Medicare for the Houston County hospital. He said there’s no secret sauce, in his mind, except that small hospitals require just as much diligence as big medical centers — especially since their profit margins are so thin and patient volume so low. He wants to improve technology in ways that health plans reward hospitals, limit nurse staffing when business is slow, and watch medical supply inventories to cut waste.

“A lot of people aren’t willing to put in the time, effort, energy, and work for a small hospital with less than 25 beds. But it needs just as much time, energy, and effort as a hospital with 300 beds,” Braden said. “I just see there’s a huge need in rural hospitals and not a lot of people who can focus their time doing it.”

It’s a tall order. Braden said he can understand any skepticism, even from the hospitals’ employees. They’ve heard turnaround promises before, and even they can be wary of the care they’d get at such run-down facilities.

Still, as Kopec bounced through the Erin hospital’s halls, he greeted nurses and clerical staff by name with a confidence that belies his age and experience. He tells anyone who will listen that rural hospitals require specialized knowledge.

“They’re not the most complicated things in the world,” Kopec said. “But if you don’t know exactly how to run them, you’re just going to run them straight into the ground.”

 

Source: News-Medical Life Sciences

Life Sciences More Than Doubles Sector Investment After Pandemic Upheaval

After more than a year of grappling with a historic global pandemic, and the ensuing upheaval that impacted every established economy and industry across the world, one sector of commercial real estate has prospered so effectively that venture capital funding more than doubled from first-quarter 2020 to the same period in 2021.

According to a new report by CBRE, “U.S. Life Sciences: The Biotech Revolution Emerges Even Stronger Post-Covid-19,” this is exactly the state of the life science sector today, and it may be the salve that helps heal an industry in the wake of an unprecedented public health and economic crisis.

“While there’s so much upheaval in commercial real estate — whether it’s offices, retail, hotel, what have you — life sciences, laboratory R&D space, and manufacturing have only strengthened,” said Ian Anderson, senior director of research for CBRE, who authored the report. “I don’t think there’s one element in the data where we haven’t reached a new record as we speak, and it just continues to get stronger.”

In addition to the massive increase in venture capital funding, CBRE reports that the demand for life sciences space across all major markets has grown by 34 percent since mid-2020. And, while more than 15.6 million square feet of speculative space is currently under construction, it is exceeded by tenant requirements being driven, in part, by massive increases in the sector’s employment.

“U.S. life sciences employment reached a record high in March 2021, driven by the revolution in biotechnologies and other industry advancements,” read the report. “Industry job growth has jumped nearly 15% since March 2017, surpassing growth in the technology sector.”

As venture capital, employment and general demand grow, so have rents throughout major life sciences markets. The report’s findings include a close to 50 percent increase in lab and research and development rents in the Boston-Cambridge cluster, and almost 40 percent for the same sector in San Diego since the end of 2017. Life sciences rents in Philadelphia, meanwhile, have increased by 35 percent since the middle of last year.

All of these drivers have combined to position life sciences as a dominant sector in commercial real estate in 2021 and beyond, as investors clamor for involvement and seek investments that provide stability in the midst of widespread market volatility.

“The COVID-19 pandemic fueled some of the alternative sectors, so health care, data centers, and life science centers were some of the beneficiaries of investors moving away from more traditional product types and into more purpose-built facilities,” said Chris Bodnar, vice chairman and co-head of Healthcare & Life Sciences Capital Markets at CBRE. “The investor pool is looking for that stickiness of the tenant going forward, especially in light of what’s happened in the office sector and concerns about how work-from-home will impact renewal probabilities.”

The evidence is especially strong in New York City, where “ … lab leasing activity has already reached a record high for a single year, at 257,000 square feet through May 2021,” according to CBRE’s findings. As contributors to the increase in activity, CBRE highlighted the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai’s recent lease of 165,000 square feet of research-focused space at 787 Eleventh Avenue, and also noted C16 Biosciences’ 19,000-square-foot lease at the Hudson Research Center, where the Bill Gates-backed startup will relocate from its incubator space at BioLabs New York.

According to Anderson, the explosion in demand for life sciences investments over the past five to six years marks the coalescence of numerous trends, including the fading effects of the 2008 recession leading to greater economic optimism, more accessible capital, insurance companies pressuring corporations to find more cost-effective solutions, rapid advancements in technology, the pandemic-driven decline of other sectors, and the extraordinary investment in the search for solutions to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“In many cases, the fact that so many other industries were in distress caused investors to look for brighter opportunities,” said Anderson. “Real estate developers and venture capitalists all of a sudden saw a new industry in the spotlight.”

Bodnar also sees three other reasons investors are going all-in on life sciences.

“One is, you can’t do research from home. Putting lab space in your home is not a viable option,” Bodnar said. “No. 2, we don’t anticipate [National Institutes of Health] funding for this sector slowing down anytime soon —we only see it accelerating. And No. 3 is that venture capital funding is accelerating. Capital flowing into this sector from private equity and venture capital is growing exponentially, and this doesn’t go unnoticed by real estate investors, some of whom are even making investments as venture capital partners with biopharma companies.”

Given all of these market forces, it’s unsurprising to see owners converting real estate initially dedicated to other sectors into life sciences facilities.

“You’ve got a lot of commercial real estate holders — could be owners of suburban office buildings or even downtown office buildings — looking for some type of silver lining; some type of better exit for themselves. So, they’re looking at converting to labs,” said Anderson. “Office owners have been through such a troubled time over the past year, and some of them have been carrying buildings in distress for many years. So, they see a potential opportunity to make a quick and easy out, and convert their office building to laboratory.”

“We’ve even had some groups talk to us about converting medical into life sciences,” said Bodnar.

And, while life sciences is now pulling from other sectors, it’s also spreading into geographical areas beyond traditional clusters like Boston-Cambridge, the San Francisco Bay Area and San Diego.

“Raleigh — one of the hotter markets — is more traditional, but that market is just so impressive,” said Anderson. “Not only have we seen huge demand for laboratory R&D space, but also for biomanufacturing and high tech. So that market continues to impress. Pittsburgh has also been impressive. And a few that are emerging that we haven’t talked about in the past as much are Portland, Salt Lake City and Dallas. They’re probably in the beginning stages, but we’ve seen a lot of venture capital go into those markets.”

Taken all together, the report’s findings indicate that while life sciences has been the notable winner in commercial real estate throughout the pandemic, it’s possible we still haven’t scratched the surface of how strong the life sciences sector will become.

“I’ve been tracking this space for years now, and it just continues to get stronger and more intense each year,” said Anderson. “The demand for laboratory R&D space by the life sciences industry is stronger than ever.”

 

Source: Commercial Observer