Monday, December 31, 2007

Shriners moving near BJC campus

Final negotiations under way for $150 million Shriners Hospital to be built in the Central West End

St. Louis Business Journal - December 31, 2007
by Lisa R. Brown

Shriners Hospital for Children is moving forward with plans to build its new $150 million hospital within the BJC HealthCare complex in the Central West End.

After a year-long search process, Shriners Hospital is in the final stages of negotiations to purchase a nearly 6-acre property at 4400 Clayton Road, according to sources familiar with the negotiations. Upon completion of the new hospital, Shriners plans to close its hospital in Frontenac, where it has been based for nearly a half century.

Chesterfield rehab hospital sold to joint venture

Grubb & Ellis Healthcare REIT Inc. said it formed a joint venture with Duke Realty's BD St. Louis Development LLC subsidiary to buy a Chesterfield hospital building and campus from Duke.

The hospital is master leased to St. John's Mercy Rehabilitation LLC, a joint venture between St. John's Mercy Health System and Centerre Healthcare.

Financial terms of the deal, which closed Dec. 20, were not disclosed in a release late Friday. Duke Realty holds a 20 percent interest while Grubb & Ellis Healthcare REIT maintains an 80 percent ownership interest in the joint venture and acts as managing member, according to the release.

The 50-bed, 112,000-square-foot hospital, at 14561 N. Outer 40 Road, west of Timberlake Manor Parkway, opened in July. The more than seven-acre property also hosts a two-story, 90,000-square-foot parking garage that can accommodate 286 vehicles.

St. John's Mercy Medical Center in Creve Coeur partnered with Clayton-based Centerre Healthcare Corp. to build the $25 million, three-story hospital. Duke Realty developed the facility and retained ownership of the land and structure.

St. John's is a member of the Sisters of Mercy Health System, which oversees 18 acute care hospitals and one heart hospital in Missouri, Arkansas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.

Centerre develops and operates inpatient rehabilitation facilities in partnership with acute care hospitals.

Duke Realty was represented by Philip Mahler and Jeffrey Cooper of Savills Granite of New York. Financing was provided by National City Bank and arranged by William Bennett. Asset management services will be provided by Grubb & Ellis Co.

Grubb & Ellis Healthcare REIT is sponsored by Santa Ana, Calif.-based commercial real estate services firm Grubb & Ellis Co. (NYSE: GBE).
Indianapolis-based Duke Realty Corp. (NYSE: DRE) is an office/industrial real estate development and services firm.

Friday, December 21, 2007

SSM restructuring local operation

Friday, December 21, 2007
St. Louis Business Journal

SSM Health Care-St. Louis is restructuring its operations, including dividing some of its hospitals into north and south regions, the organization said Thursday.

SSM said it is creating the north and south regions to enhance a regional approach focused on delivery of medical services, patient satisfaction and patient safety. The new organizational structure comes with new leadership.

Mike Graue, the current executive vice president of St. Louis network operations, will now oversee the south region as executive vice president of operations/south region. The south region includes SSM Cardinal Glennon Children's Medical Center, SSM St. Mary's Health Center, SSM St. Joseph Hospital of Kirkwood (the future SSM St. Clare Health Center) and SSM Rehab.

Steve Johnson, president of SSM DePaul Health Center, will become the executive vice president of operations/north region. Johnson will oversee operations for SSM DePaul Health Center, SSM St. Joseph Health Center, SSM St. Joseph Hospital West and SSM Behavioral Medicine.

Also, SSM Health Care named Sherlyn Hailstone executive vice president and chief operating officer of SSM Cardinal Glennon. Hailstone has served as president of SSM St. Joseph Health Center in St. Charles since 2005. The company has begun the search process for Hailstone's replacement.

SSM Health Care said it is also searching for a regional vice president/chief nursing officer who will oversee patient satisfaction and safety and the nursing practice.

"Our primary goal has always been to provide exceptional care for our patients and meet the health care needs of our community. We believe these organizational changes will further strengthen our ability to deliver on that goal," Jim Sanger, president and CEO of SSM Health Care-St. Louis, said in a statement.

The changes come a month after Sanger replaced Ron Levy, who announced he was leaving the health system's St. Louis organization in October. Sanger was previously president and chief executive of St. Mary's Good Samaritan Inc. in Southwestern Illinois, a two-hospital joint operating venture. Sanger was hired 10 years ago to lead the operation, which consists of St. Mary's Hospital in Centralia, part of the SSM network, and Good Samaritan Regional Health Center in Mount Vernon, part of the Felician Sisters health system.

St. Louis-based SSM Health Care (SSMHC), a health care ministry founded in 1872, is one of the largest Catholic systems in the nation. It is also one of the largest health-care providers in Missouri. SSMHC owns, operates and manages 20 acute-care hospitals.