Blue Cross and Blue Shield and North Memorial Health to share ownership of 20 clinics

June 25, 2019
The goal is to reduce consumer costs, improve quality

North Memorial Health will own 51 percent of the joint venture. Blue Cross, through its parent company, is purchasing a 49 percent ownership stake in the clinics. The agreement encompasses 20 primary and specialty care clinics in the Twin Cities that operate under the North Memorial Health brand, announced the health system, noting that the clinic business entity will be structured separately from both parent organizations and managed through a newly created CEO position and board of directors. Jennifer Close, currently President and Chief Ambulatory Officer at North Memorial Health, has been named CEO of the joint venture.

The ambitious goal, according to the release, of forging a payer/provider partnership that could simultaneously reshape both the cost and delivery of care was spearheaded by two CEOs who also happen to be MDs: Dr. Craig Samitt of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota and Dr. J. Kevin Croston of North Memorial Health. As caregivers themselves, Samitt and Croston heard what consumers were saying – they want something different from the care system to help them live healthier lives.

“Incremental change has been holding the healthcare industry back for too long. The industry is moving too slow, so we are taking bold action to create a transformative solution that is consumer friendly, improves the quality of care and delivers outcomes that are measurably better than others,” Dr. Croston said in the statement.

The shared ownership model was designed by both organizations to have North Memorial Health clinics serve as the epicenter of healthcare transformation within Minnesota. The emphasis on value-based payments over volume of services will provide consumers with more affordable care, better patient experiences, increased price transparency and more predictability of future medical costs.

“Healthcare costs too much, and it is too often difficult for people to understand and navigate. With this joint venture, we’re removing confusion from the equation,” said Dr Samitt in the statement. “Blue Cross and North Memorial Health have come together to transform healthcare in Minnesota in a way that no others have, and the winner will be the consumer.”

A key goal of the shared ownership structure is to reduce the overall cost of care by up to 20 percent over five years. The model will focus on wellness, prevention and health outcomes, rather than consumption of services.

Recent mergers and consolidations within the healthcare industry have not resulted in lower pricing or better service to consumers. This new joint venture aims to change that trend. Blue Cross and North Memorial Health don’t see this as just an ownership change. It’s an integrated approach to manage costs with their respective strengths coming together.

Croston and Samitt say the shared ownership will also provide a comprehensive continuum of care based on where consumers want it – in the home, in the community or online. The result will be care that is more accessible, more local and more convenient.

Implementation of the shared ownership model will begin in January 2020.