Hospital Corporation of America
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| HCA Inc | |
|---|---|
| Type | Private company |
| Founded | 1968 |
| Headquarters | Nashville, Tennessee |
| Key people | Jack O. Bovender, Jr., CEO & Chairman |
| Industry | Health Care |
| Products | Healthcare Services |
| Revenue | ▲$25.477 billion USD (2006) |
| Operating income | ▲$1.862 billion USD (2006) |
| Net income | ▲$1.036 billion USD (2006) |
| Employees | 134,000 |
| Website | www.hcahealthcare.com |
The Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) is the largest private operator of health care facilities in the world. It is based in Nashville, Tennessee, United States and is widely considered to be the single largest factor in making that city a hotspot for healthcare enterprise.
The founders included two members of the Frist family, which became very wealthy as a result. The former majority leader of the U.S. Senate, Bill Frist is a member of the family but sold all his HCA shares in 2005. Most of his $20 million (or more) personal fortune was made through his holdings in HCA. Jack O. Bovender, Jr., is the Chief Executive Officer of HCA.
During the 1970s-1980s the corporation went through a tremendous growth period acquiring hundreds of hospitals across the United States which numbered 255 owned and 208 which HCA managed.
In the late-1990s, after a merger with Louisville-based Columbia Hospital Corporation which formed Columbia/HCA, the company was investigated by the government for Medicare and Medicaid fraud and paid a settlement of $1.7 billion, the largest fraud settlement in US history at the time. Then-CEO Rick Scott resigned but no criminal prosecutions resulted.
The name subsequently reverted to "Hospital Corporation of America." HCA abandoned the use of its name in its home market and instead promotes its Nashville hospitals under the TriStar brand.
On July 1, 2005, Senator Frist sold all of his HCA shares two weeks before disappointing earnings sent the stock on a 9-point plunge. Frist claimed that he sold his shares to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest if he ran for president. Other executives sold their stock at the same time. Shareholders sued HCA in a lawsuit alleging that the company made false claims about their profits to drive up the price which then fell when the company reported disappointing financial results. The lawsuit was settled in August 2007 with HCA agreeing to pay $20 million to the shareholders. [1] In November 2006 HCA was acquired by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Bain Capital and Merrill Lynch Global Private Equity in what was, at the time, the largest leveraged buyout (LBO) in history, adjusted for inflation.
Contents |
[edit] Facilities
As of December 31, 2006, HCA operated 173 hospitals and 107 freestanding surgery centers located in 20 states, London, England and Geneva, Switzerland[2]. In August 2007, HCA sold its hospitals in Switzerland due to decreasing revenue.
- HCA Facility MapPDF (4.15 MiB)
[edit] References
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Corporate page
- TriStar home page
- HCA Midwest Division home page
- HCA West Florida Division
- CEO's official bio
- HCA HealthONE Colorado
- PBS report on fraud case
- Corporate Medicine Web Site report on HCA history and fraud case

