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I Remember Rick Scott: A Great Makeover, but Still the Same Guy Part-1
Summary: When I wrote Money-Driven Medicine, the Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much (Harper Collins, 2006), Rick Scott stood out as one of the more memorable characters in a rogues’ gallery of CEOs who helped create the stock market bubble of the 1990s. I first met Scott in the early 1990s, when he had just been named CEO of Columbia/HCA, a for-profit hospital chain that would makes its reputation as a serial acquirer, gobbling up other hospitals to become one of the biggest health care companies in the world. At the time, I was mystified: Scott had no experience in the health-care industry, and didn’t appear to be CEO material. Heart sinking, I realized I was going to have to change the focus of my story. Barron’s had a new editor-in-chief who wanted “positive stories.” He expected a glowing cover story about a celebrity CEO. But Scott didn’t fit the part. Today, Scott the candidate seems somewhat manic; back then he appeared slightly depressed. I remember thinking : he could easily be a motel manager. “Rick Scott” 2010, picture from his campaign site But I wasn’t in a position to get the evidence to write an investigative story. I would have needed access to HCA’s books. So I wound up writing a piece about competition between the for-profit hospital industry,and non-profit hospitals that received tax breaks that they didn’t always deserve, creating unfair competition. Scott aruged. This was about the only idea that Scott had. (He had gotten it from Richard Rainwater. In fact, Rainwater was correct: some non-profit didn’t (and still don’t) provide enough benefits to their communities to justify the tax break.) Fort Worth financier Richard Rainwater set Scott, a mergers and acquisitions lawyer from Dallas, on the path to corporate stardom in October 1987, when the two created Columbia Health Care. When Scott and Rainwater teamed up, Scott’s medical experience was limited to helping health care companies buy and sell each other. He got his start in the M&A business orchestrating deals involving radio stations, fast-food businesses and oil and gas companies. He was, as Joe Flowers observes, “the kind of lawyer that a buy-out artist would lovingly call a ‘mechanic.’” Rainwater’s knowledge of running a hospital was equally limited. But they had a vision: “to do for hospitals . . . what McDonald’s had done for the food business . . . what Wal-Mart had done in the retailing business.” Rainwater wanted to combine volume with low cost. (Since then, of course, U.S. hospitals have learned how to combine volume with high cost, but that is a story that HealthBeat readers already know.) |
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