CHS emphasizes divestitures, strong volumes in Q1 earnings
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Dive Brief:

  • Community Health Systems reported first-quarter earnings that beat analysts’ expectations on Wednesday, including year-over-year same store operating revenue growth of 3.1% on high demand for services and a heavier flu season.

  • The health system also made significant progress toward its long-term goal of deleveraging its balance sheet. CHS completed three divestitures during the quarter and announced a debt refinancing maneuver in tandem with the earnings release to bring down CHS’ debt-to-operating income ratio.

  • Still, familiar headwinds continued to dog the system, including elevated medical specialist fees and high rates of claim denials from payers. Uncertainties from Washington also add complexity to strategic planning, executives said, noting the Trump administration has been slow to approve state Medicaid supplemental payment programs.

Dive Insight:

The health system beat the street’s expectations for operating revenue in the first quarter, recording $3.2 billion, a 0.6% increase over last year.

The system saw a sizable boost in volumes from a stronger-than-expected flu season, with same store admissions rising 4% year over year. Executives also noted an uptick in volumes from cardiac procedures and robotic surgeries, which they said pointed to the return on investment from new advanced platforms.

Operating expenses came in at $2.8 billion. CEO Tim Hingtgen told investors the company had “held the line” on supply costs and decreased contract labor costs by $8 million year over year. However, medical specialist fees increased 9% year over year to total $163 million.

CFO Kevin Hammons said CHS had planned for medical specialist fees to rise, with the majority of the increase in anesthesiology.

“It is a pain point, it continues to be a pain point,” Hammons said.

Heightened medical specialist fees were baked into CHS’ 2025 guidance, according to the CFO. CHS predicted the fees would rise 8% to 12% year over year when issuing its guidance in February, and said the system was on track with that target. Still, CHS is investing in insourcing whenever possible in hopes of bringing costs down.

CHS also completed three divestitures during the quarter, including ShorePoint Health System in Florida, Lake Norman Regional Medical Center in North Carolina and its 50% stake in Mississippi-based Merit Health Biloxi. The completed deals generated $544 million in cash proceeds for CHS, and the system estimates it will bring in $460 million more when it completes its sale of Texas-based Cedar Park Regional Medical Center later this year.