Eleanor Kennedy | Nashville Business Journal
“HMA-itis” is not contagious. Wayne Smith wants to be sure you know.
The often colorful chairman and CEO of Franklin-based hospital giant Community Health Systems Inc. assured the crowd of that fact at the start of the Nashville Health Care Council’s “Wall Street” panel, an annual gathering where Smith turns the tables on the analysts who usually pepper him and his peer public company CEOs with questions.
In the wake of CHS’ year of challenges, Smith started things out with some self-effacing humor, noting that while it might be hard to tell from his company’s stock price (which has fallen nearly 90 percent over the past two years to just over $6), he is still “alive and well.”
After reiterating his confidence that CHS (NYSE:CYH) is on the path toward recovery following the blows suffered from its 2014 acquisition of Florida-based Health Management Associates, Smith steered the analysts into the prediction business, seeking — as investors and analysts had of him last week at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco— some sort of clear prediction of what a Trump presidency means for health care reform.
The answer?
“I don’t have a clue,” said Whit Mayo, managing director with Robert W. Baird.
Overall, the panelists said, it seems there are several players involved in the health care reform conversation who prefer a slow transition from the Affordable Care Act to its ultimate replacement, a move that would give the industry time to adjust to whatever the new model may be. The success of Medicaid expansion — in the states that did expand it — suggests a program built around covering more people through Medicaid would be a logical core for a Republican replacement, Smith and the analysts said, though the federal money within that program would likely be delivered through block grants or another alternative structure.
A few other hot topics and big takeaways from the event: