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The many extracts on this page are from copyright material. They are reproduced here for educational purposes and to stimulate public debate about the provision of health care. I consider this to be "fair use" in the common interest. They should not be reproduced for commercial purposes.
 

References
Integrated Health Services in the Marketplace


Disclaimer:- The material is selective and not all inclusive. The extracts do not necessarily reflect the perspective of the original. Corporate denials and explanations have not been included. No claim is made that all of the matters referred to are true. The intention is to give the flavour of the material and an idea of the extent of the allegations. Can there be so much smoke without a large fire? This is a matter of public welfare and the interests of the pubic must be placed before those of the corporations.  

CONTENTS THIS PAGE


INTRODUCTION

 

The story of IHS as a business is the story of ultimate failure
failure of the blind faith in growth, size and integration.

IHS Goals:- The story of Integrated Health Services (IHS) is not dissimilar to that of Sun Healthcare and Vencor - or for that matter Columbia/HCA and Tenet/NME. Its prime focus was corporate growth and it identified very strongly with the vision of integrated care. It sought to provide a full range of services in a vast empire so that it could provide for and capitalise on all of the medical opportunities offered by patients in its grasp.

As a general rule corporations have not been too concerned about how they have capitalised on these opportunities. Patients have been misused and grossly over treated to serve the corporate bottom line. This is most apparent in aged care where non essential remunerative care was exploited to the point of fraud and beyond, but non remunerative but life preserving care was neglected. IHS is no exception.

Like Sun and Vencor IHS targeted profitable subacute care or step down care in its nursing homes. This was paid per item of service by Medicare. With IHS intense focus on profit less remunerative Medicaid funded care for the frail elderly suffered,

Services were grossly distorted. These policies were enormously successful and IHS became an icon of entrepreneurialism and was admired in the marketplace. No one looked at its practices. When the government eventually stepped in to stop the rorting its empire collapsed.

Integrated Care:- This concept is expressed in a number of marketing and organisational phrases. We hear of One Stop medicine - MacMedicine - vertical integration and horizontal integration. These ideas enjoyed unchallenged legitimacy during the 1990's and became buzzwords in Australia. Mayne Nickless marketed its "One Stop Medicine" likening it to a travel agent. Dr Wooldridge, the Australian federal minister for health was hooked and made a senior Mayne Nickless executive chairman of the powerful and influential government regulator - the Health Insurance Commission (HIC).

Many of the ideas behind integrated care are sound and in the right context it has much to offer. When introduced within a competitive corporate marketplace it simply becomes a means of generating profit by shifting patients around like pawns. As we shall see it is a recipe for disaster. Under a fee for service system it generates over servicing and fraud. In a capitation system it pushes up costs and is a liability. In a market system driven by profit rather than care the treatment given follows the funding and not the needs of the patients. IHS collapse is another nail in the coffin for corporate integration.

Size:- Large empires were seen to generate economies of size and also provide the services needed by an integrated system. In the real world they succumbed to the pressures generated by their own policies. Smaller operators who concentrated on providing care rather than building empires were more durable inn the market and also provided the services citizens required more successfully. IHS illustrates this well.


The References

The references and extracts on this page describe the exponential growth of IHS as it blindly pursued the "One Stop" dream of the unusual Dr Elkins, before collapsing into bankruptcy. The house of cards, built in the heady but unreal world of market medicine fell to pieces when it came into contact with the world the rest of us live in.

Other pages deal with the real world consequences of this one eyed pursuit of success in the market place , fraud and neglect of vulnerable elderly citizens - the grandfathers and grandmothers of the USA.



LOOKING BACK AT THE GLORIOUS YEARS
(to contents)

I do not have pre-1997 articles. I therefore start with extracts from some recent articles published after the bubble had burst. They review what happened and describe IHS in its heyday.

Health chain turns pale; IHS has suffered 82% stock plunge, cut 1,000 jobs; Medical services
THE BALTIMORE SUN February 21, 1999
M. William Salganik

The Owings Mills nursing home chain has grown spectacularly since it went public in 1991.

Through the purchase of nursing homes and related businesses, IHS' revenue increased from less than $150 million in 1991 to more than $3 billion in 1998.
----------------------
Until recently, IHS had been buying up a range of health businesses with the aim of becoming a full-service provider for people leaving the hospital. But now, it's not adding business lines, it's shedding them.
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IHS was founded in 1986 by Dr. Robert N. Elkins, a psychiatrist who anticipated that as managed care grew, so would the demand for "subacute" services -- care that is less intense than that of a hospital but more intense than that of a traditional nursing home.

He bought nursing homes and converted many of the rooms to subacute care.

(Although the company is based here, none of its nursing homes is in Maryland. Elkins once said he hadn't been able to acquire any in this market at a price he wanted to pay.)

At times, the company used the slogan: "Hospital care without hospital costs."

That concept caught the attention of Medicare, the federal government's insurance program for the elderly, which was seeking ways to lower its spiraling payments for post-hospital care.

Spending soars

Medicare spending for skilled nursing facilities zoomed from $2.8 billion in 1989, or 4.7 percent of all Medicare spending, to $10.6 billion in 1996, 9 percent of all Medicare spending.

As IHS grew and developed a business dependent on federal reimbursement, Elkins became one of the country's largest political contributors.

In the 1996 election cycle, Elkins and IHS gave $572,500 to the Clinton-Gore campaign and the Democratic Party, winning him invitations to three White House coffees for donors.
--------------------------
The idea of "hospital care without hospital costs" also had an obvious appeal for health mantainence organizations (HMOs) and other managed-care insurers who saw it as a way to control costs for a variety of services.

IHS developed a new HMO strategy based on that view. The company decided to offer one-stop shopping to HMOs looking to control costs in post-hospital care by contracting with operators who could offer a full range of services at a fixed price per patient, a system of payment known as capitation.

Continuum of care'

Elkins, in the 1993 IHS annual report, said the company was looking to provide "a full continuum of care" in each market. That would include, he wrote, "subacute care, outpatient care, home care, rehabilitation care and pharmacy services."

By moving a patient from subacute skilled nursing facilities to outpatient centers to home care, IHS reasoned, it could maximize its margins on the flat payments.

To build such a full-service system, it stepped up the size and variety of its acquisitions.

In 1996, it bought First American Health Care, a large ($400 million annual revenue) but bankrupt home health care operator, paying $154 million at closing, with an additional payment due later based on earnings.

IHS bought RoTech in 1997 for $858 million in stock and assumed debt.

And the next month, IHS paid $1.15 billion in cash for a large chunk of Horizon/CMS Healthcare from Healthsouth Corp.

The " chunk" was 139 nursing homes, 12 specialty hospitals, 35 institutional pharmacies and more than 1,000 rehabilitation therapy contracts.

"Although this transaction will further enhance and broaden Integrated's capabilities, the all-cash transaction significantly increased an already high debt load and strained Integrated's credit profile," Standard & Poor's said in January 1998.

Though its credit was stretched -- its debt topped $3 billion -- IHS had assembled the one-stop-shopping network it thought would appeal to HMOs. The HMOs, however, never showed up with the big, flat-rate contracts.

"Integrated got a couple of small capitated contracts, then managed care got into trouble," said Stephen Monroe, a partner in Irving Levin Associates, a Connecticut publisher of health industry trade journals.

With profits melting, HMOs spurned capitated contracts for subacute services and concentrated on dealings with doctors, hospitals and drug companies. "Getting into capitated contracts for post-acute care was not high on their priorities, " Monroe said.

Meanwhile, he said, "the federal government started to get concerned when nursing home spending ballooned."

The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 dictated a new Medicare payment system for skilled nursing facilities that was projected to save $9.2 billion over five years.

"Clearly, the new Medicare reimbursement system is causing more problems for Integrated than anyone anticipated, and when I say anyone,' I mean investors, people like me, and the company itself," said Mains, the Advest analyst.

THE SHAME OF OUR NURSING HOMES; nursing homes allegedly treat patients poorly
The Nation March 29, 1999
Eric Bates,

Integrated Health Services (Owings Mills, Maryland). The chain moved into the front ranks of the inudstry when it acquired rival Horizon/CMS Healthcare for $ 1.2 billion. It now boasts 42,600 beds and revenues of $ 3 billion.

Integrated Chief Prospered Troubled Times in Nursing Homes
Albuquerque Journal August 1, 1999, Sunday

The head of the biggest operator of nursing homes in New Mexico earned about $8 million in salary and bonuses in three years, according to a company document.

Robert Elkins, chairman and chief executive officer of Integrated Health Services of Owings Mills, Md., earned $2.3 million in salary for years 1996 through 1998, says the document filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

He earned nearly $5.8 million in bonuses for years 1996 and 1997, the document says.

Integrated also is making irrevocable contributions to a retirement trust for Elkins that is to hold $23.9 million by 2001, according to the document filed with the SEC.

Integrated also leases at a cost of nearly $1.1 million a year an aircraft from a company wholly owned by Elkins, the document says. Elkins has exclusive first use of the airplane but must reimburse Integrated for its out-of-pocket costs if he uses the aircraft for personal reasons.
----------------------------------------
Integrated operates several facilities once owned by Horizon/CMS Healthcare of Albuquerque, which was sold in 1997.

The company is relatively young 13 years old and has grown into a $3 billion-a-year business primarily by gobbling up other companies.

It has amassed a mountain of long-term debt $3.4 billion and its stock price has plummeted in part because of Medicare cuts for nursing-home care.

Golden years fade for nursing home chains; An industry booming only a few years ago struggles to survive
THE BALTIMORE SUN March 5, 2000, Sunday ,FINAL

Long-term care has a cloudy short-term future.

With Integrated Health Service's filing for bankruptcy protection last month, four of the nation's seven largest nursing-home chains -- with 177,000 beds -- are in bankruptcy.
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The current crunch in the industry has its roots in the mid-1980s, when companies like Genesis and Integrated Health were getting started. They took nursing homes in a new direction -- a direction that made the term "long-term care" somewhat misleading.

Dr. Robert Elkins, who founded IHS in 1986, anticipated a demand for "subacute" services -- care that is less intense (and less expensive) than what hospitals provide.

Integrated Health Services and other nursing-home chains began shifting their business away from traditional, long-term care for frail elderly clients, and began providing shorter-term care for patients leaving the hospital -- at higher rates than those usually charged by nursing homes.

At Genesis, the shift to shorter-term patients meant the average length of stay dropped from about 450 days -- when the company began in the mid-80s -- to about 150 days now, according to Walker, who says "45 percent of the people go home in less than 60 days."
------------------------
Meanwhile, the number of Medicare patients treated in nursing homes was more than doubling as well -- from 638,000 to 1.6 million. Medicare spending in skilled nursing facilities -- known in the trade as "sniffs," from the initials SNF -- grew from $578 million in 1986 to $13.6 billion in 1998.

The nursing home chains followed the money, becoming more dependent on Medicare payments for subacute patients -- now 25 to 40 percent of revenue for large chains -- in addition to the traditional Medicaid payments for indigent elderly residents.

Growing rapidly, the chains bought more and more nursing homes and more and more related businesses -- therapy companies, home-nursing operators, institutional pharmacies -- to serve the subacute patients.

Integrated Health Services was one of the most aggressively acquisitive. The Sparks company's revenue increased from less than $150 million in 1991 to more than $3 billion in 1998, making it one of Maryland's largest publicly-owned companies. Similarly, Genesis grew from $219.7 million in fiscal 1993 to $1.87 billion in fiscal 1999.

But the growth in spending on subacute care caught the attention of Congress, which cut payments as part of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997.

The government cut its payments and, instead of simply reimbursing nursing homes for the cost of subacute care -- whatever the cost was -- the government switched to a per-day rate.
--------------------------------
"Egos get involved. You grow by acquisition, and you've got to get the deal done. There were some bad business decisions."

Arvid Muller, a senior research analyst for the Service Employees International Union, which represents thousands of nursing-home workers, said that while Medicare cuts were a factor in the bankruptcies, "some of the companies went into a huge buying spree. But they overpaid for the homes, and now they can't get enough revenue to pay their debts."

Most nursing homes, he said, make money on an operating basis, but can't necessarily cover debt service.

Top 15 nursing home chains ::: By the Numbers
Modern Healthcare Supplement July 31, 2000

Top 15 nursing home chains. Ranked by number of beds as of January 1999

Rank ------Company ----------- Beds

1 Beverly Enterprises Fort Smith, Ark. 62,293

2 Mariner Post -Acute Network Atlanta 49,656

3 HCR Manor Care Toledo, Ohio 47,138

4 Sun Healthcare Group Albuquerque 44,941

5 Integrated Health Services Owings Mills, Md. 44,302

6 Vencor Louisville, Ky. 38,362

7 Genesis Health Venturers Kennett Square, Pa. 35,016

 



THE LAST OF THE GLORIOUS YEARS
(to contents)

My data base picks up the story in December 1996 when IHS is blinded by its success. It is buying frantically and simply ignores the looming funding crisis. The articles are roughly chronological but I have tried to group related material.

COMMENT:- Patients over 65, unable to afford private care in the USA are covered by Medicare which is under financial pressure. Government had unlimited faith in market forces and managed care. This led the government to encourage Medicare recipients to join HMO's which were then paid by Medicare. This moved them from a cost generating item of service system to a cost reducing HMO system. When compared with other HMO patients these poorer patients were not as healthy. They required more care and generated higher costs so were not profitable. The HMO's soon dumped them.

IHS built its empire on Medicare. In the next clipping IHS gains access to 161,000 elderly citizens by making a business agreement with Aetna. Together their nurses and case managers will control the care received by these patients, presumably in the corporate interest. This gives the patients little choice. Aetna's conduct suggests that the financial relationships with doctors in providing for these patients is likely to be such as to induce the doctors to serve corporate interests rather than their patients.

FOR THE RECORD
Modern Healthcare December 23, 1996 Page 24 - News

Integrated Health Services, an Owings Mills, Md.-based post-acute provider, said it has signed an agreement with Aetna U.S. Healthcare to offer services to more than 161,000 skilled-nursing-facility residents in Delaware, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania. Under the five-year agreement, Aetna's Medicare HMO enrollees in those states will have their patient-care and preventive services coordinated by IHS geriatric nurses and by Aetna case managers. IHS provides post-acute services, including subacute care, assisted living, skilled nursing and home care, at more than 1,000 sites in 40 states.

COMMENT:- Like Sun and Vencor. IHS focussed on rapid corporate growth. They targeted Medicare by providing subacute care and developed an unsustainable income stream. They used it to raise loans to fund their rapid expansion. This large debt rendered them vulnerable to the slightest economic downturn.

IHS to buy CCA for $94 million
Modern Healthcare August 1, 1997

Post-acute provider Integrated Health Services will buy Community Care of America in a cash deal valued at about $94 million. The deal is expected to be completed within 90 days. CCA, based in Naples, Fla., operates 54 long-term-care facilities, a physician practice and an outpatient rehabilitation center. Owings Mills, Md.-based IHS said the addition will broaden its post-acute network in rural areas. IHS also said it will acquire home-care operator Arcadia Services of Southfield, Mich., for undisclosed terms.

FOR THE RECORD : IHS to buy Coram unit
Modewrn Healthcare Aug. 25, 1997 Page 14 Briefs

Integrated Health Services last week signed an agreement to buy the lithotripsy unit of Coram Healthcare for $130 million in cash. Four months ago, Owings Mills, Md.-based IHS terminated a planned merger with Denver-based Coram and agreed to pay the company $21 million. The lithotripsy business includes 33 mobile machines operating in 18 states. The acquisition is expected to close within 60 days.

COMMENT:- The following article reveals IHS policy of borrow and buy, as well as its plans to provide a complete One Stop service - all the way to a patients home. Columbia was in the midst of a massive fraud investigation and was busy selling off those businesses where its movement of patients for profit had aroused anger and investigation.

IHS MAY BE PREPARING FOR HOME-CARE BUY
Modern Healthcare Sep. 22, 1997 Page 14 News
Charlotte Snow

Integrated Health Services said it has secured a $1.75 billion line of credit, leading to speculation that it may be readying to buy the home-care operations of Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp. or Apria Healthcare Group.

The deal includes a $1 billion revolving credit line and a $750 million term loan, with Citibank and Toronto Dominion Bank heading a group that includes 51 other lenders. The new credit facility replaces a $700 million revolving credit facility with Citibank and 22 other lenders.

Columbia Homecare Group and Apria, two of the nation's largest home-care companies, both went on the block this summer. IHS operates more than 1,000 post-acute locations in 45 states and is also one of the top five largest home-care companies in the U.S.
----------------------------
IHS is one of the few public companies with an expressed interest in acquiring home-care companies," she said. "Having the credit facility in place makes it a qualified buyer and puts it in the running."

IHS' new line of credit follows a recent statement by New York-based Standard & Poor's Corp. that the outlook for the company's credit is "negative" and "there is the potential that a large debt-financed acquisition could lead to a rating downgrade" (See story, p. 68).
-----------------------
Like Columbia, Apria's objective is to sell the company as a whole, not in pieces, Aronson said.

Aronson said Apria anticipates announcing an agreement in late October or early November. She would not comment on whether IHS is one of the interested parties.

Marc Levin, IHS' executive vice president, said the $750 million loan will be used to finance pending acquisitions. Levin said the remaining $1 billion is "not earmarked for any particular acquisition." 

UPDATE
Modern healthcare Nov. 10, 1997 Page 70 Briefs

Owings Mills, Md.-based Integrated Health Services has completed its $858 million acquisition of Orlando, Fla.-based RoTech Medical Corp. The deal included $508 million in stock and $350 million in assumed debt. IHS said its purchase of RoTech, one of the nation's largest providers of home respiratory services, will strengthen its balance sheet, increase its margins and expand its services. IHS, which announced the acquisition in July, said it plans to expand RoTech's acquisition activity, its operations in urban markets and its operations to managed-care and other insurers (July 14, p. 14). The combined company expects pro forma revenues of $2.6 billion with nearly 2,000 post-acute locations in 46 states.

Report: Columbia/HCA May Spin Off
The New York Times November 11, 1997 By The Associated Press

Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp. may spin off about a third of its 340 hospitals into a separate company, The Wall Street Journal reported today.
------------------------------------
HealthSouth Corp., a Birmingham, Ala.-based company, is interested in Columbia's rehabilitation and surgery centers, and Integrated Health Services Inc. of Owings Mills, Md., is said to be a likely buyer of the home-health division.

CONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY: COLUMBIA WEIGHS SPINNING OFF SURGERY UNIT FOR VALUE
Modern Healthcare April 6, 1998 Page 34 News

Columbia has been telling analysts it plans to complete the sale of its home health business and deal with related regulatory hurdles for Value Health, which it acquired in August 1997. Integrated Health Services of Owings Mills, Md., has acknowledged it's in due diligence to acquire Columbia's home health business, but Columbia said late last month it plans to sell the business to more than one buyer.

COMMENT:- The next article lists the five largest deals in 1997 and the five largest in several areas. I have extracted only IHS deals. These purchases were made during the period when government was complaining about rising Medicare costs, over servicing and fraud. They were quite openly changing the funding system on which IHS' repayment of loans depended in order to deal with these problems. While supposedly preparing to cope with these changes IHS went out and borrowed vast sums of money and spent it on companies whose profit stream would depend on the same Medicare funding.

Note that there was some sort of a deal with HealthSouth to purchase Horizon. I do not have any details but it is clear that IHS acquired US $ 1,300 million of Horizon's nursing homes. As I read later reports HealthSouth also acted as a guarantor for some of the loans. I include a snippet from a later article about this.

Horizon's chairman Elliott trained with Andrew Turner in Hillhaven in the 1980's under Tenet/NME's chairman Richard Eamer. Elliott and Turner left Hillhaven to form Horizon. Turner left Horizon soon after and formed Sun Healthcare. Both were growth companies and expanded rapidly trying not to compete directly with one another. The lineage back to Tenet/NME's profit before care culture can be traced through Hillhaven to Vencor which purchased it, to Sun Healthcare, and through Horizon to IHS.

Size does matter; healthcare industry mergers and acquisitions; Cover Story Blecher, Michele Bitoun
Hospitals & Health Networks June 20, 1998

FIVE LARGEST DEALS OF 1997

Integrated Health Services acquisitions were among the five largest in 1997 in the following areas.

HOME HEALTH (millions)

Integrated Health Services acquired RoTech Medical $ 858
Integrated Health Services acquired Ambulatory Pharmaceutical $ 34

REHABILITATION

Integrated Health Services acquired Rehab Dynamics $ 22

LABS

Integrated Health Services acquired T2 $ 127

LONG-TERM CARE

HealthSouth acquired Horizon/CMS $ 1,600

Integrated Health Services acquired Horizon/CMS Nursing Homes for HealthSouth $ 1,300

SPURNING HOME HEALTH HEALTHSOUTH CEO: WANING INTEREST CAUSING NOV. 1 EXIT
Modern Healthcare Nov. 2, 1998 Page 6 News

"That still nets us out at about $300 million," Scrushy said, referring to the $400 million gain he said the company made on the sale of most of Horizon's long-term-care assets to Owings Mills, Md.-based Integrated Health Services soon after the acquisition (of Horizon).

National Hospice Provider Changes Name
PR Newswire November 10, 1998

Hospice of Integrated Health Services of Dallas and Fort Worth is the new flagship name for the former Horizon Hospice Care, Inc. and Samaritan Care Hospice. Both Hospice providers were acquired by Integrated Health Services (IHS). Hospice of Integrated Health Services has four locations in Texas (Dallas, Arlington, Houston, and San Antonio) and other locations in nine states.
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IHS is recognized for its leadership in providing care-effective, and cost- effective solutions to the health care problems facing America today.
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Hospice of Integrated Health Services, formerly Horizon Hospice Care, Inc. and Samaritan Care Hospice, was founded in 1995 and 1996 respectively.


 THE WRITING ON THE WALL
(to contents)

1998 started off optimistically but under the new funding system profits started to fall rapidly. Analysts and then company executives realised that there were problems and started doing something about it. They were still in denial and failed to assess the situation realistically. When the penny finally dropped there was a wild attempt to sell off at bargain basement prices assets, which were originally purchased for many millions. By this stage there were few buyers. This next set of references describes these events,

COMMENT:- The following extracts from a market journal show that the market was aware of the impending problems but its framework of understanding did not allow it to respond in a sensible and logical way. Consolidation and size (i.e. takeovers) are seen as desirable and the developments are reported on positively. Growth is the operative word and growth is good.

The likely effects of the new Medicare funding are described and this is followed by a description of the massive loans which are being raised to fuel the takeovers. No mention is made of the problems in servicing these loans under the new system. The article finally promotes continued "consolidation" and integration by acquisitions. It singles out IHS as a leader in this strategy. Investors who read this are likely to go out and buy IHS shares.

To anyone thinking outside the market framework the illogicality of this article is glaringly apparent. It reveals that those trapped in marketplace frames of understanding are unable to step out of the framework to see what is obvious to the rest of us. I wonder if the financial advice most of us receive from our financial advisers is any more soundly based!

Banking: financing trends in an acquisitive health care market - focus on long-term care.
Journal of Health Care Finance June 22, 1998
Gordon, Lawrence J.; Bressler, Andrew

Introduction

The merger and acquisition (M&A) frenzy sweeping the health care industry has been particularly intense in the long-term care sector. As a result, the financial community - both lenders and investors - now views this sector differently and the approach to long-term care financing has changed. Based on our experience, we focus on six factors driving consolidation in the sector and - through the use of four transactions as a platform - discuss the key credit issues and risks faced by long-term care companies today.
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Dramatic change

Consolidation and integration have driven the dramatic change in the long-term care industry in the 1990s. Table 1 shows the top 10 chains at year end 1997 (by 1996 bed count). Rehabilitation hospitals and facilities, skilled nursing homes, assisted living facilities, intermediate care facilities, home health services, and other specialty care services have all grown significantly in size and number in the last 10 years.
-----------------------------
Effect of PPS (PPS is the new Medicare funding system)

Larger, low-cost nursing home chains should prosper under PPS. Under PPS, nursing homes will be reimbursed on a flat fee per day for Medicare patients. High cost nursing homes and facilities that provided excess ancillary services to Medicare patients will likely record losses. Conversely, larger, more efficient nursing home chains that effectively manage costs below the average Medicare PPS per diem rate could see a meaningful improvement in profitability. Similar to the introduction of PPS for acute care hospitals, a significant number of smaller, high cost nursing homes probably will not sufficiently reduce costs and thus may be forced to merge or sell their facilities.
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Leveraged lending

The increased M&A activity in the health care sector during 1997 profoundly affected health care-related lending, particularly in long-term care. The considerable increase in total leverage necessitated the extension of final maturity dates to enable companies to amortize significant amounts of principal during the later years. As senior debt multiples associated with these leveraged loans continued to rise, the financial buyers and lead lenders more frequently structured transactions with higher levels of "back-end" amortizing, institutional debt tranches. The "B" and "C" term loan tranches are senior obligations that bear interest rate premiums to traditional revolving credit and "A" term loans, and carry longer final maturities. These B and C tranches became commonplace in long-term care transactions in the second half of 1997. The robust growth of these various sources of institutional funding (for example mutual funds and collateralized loan obligation vehicles) has represented an important component of the successful structuring of these and other leveraged financings.
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Long-term care companies and post-acute care services

Long-term care companies are expected to continue to develop and acquire a continuum of post-acute care services. These services are effected through the acquisition of home health care, assisted living, rehabilitation, and therapy services. In particular, Integrated Health Services has been a leader in this strategy, and we expect further movement in this direction as other long-term care companies increase their share of the post-acute dollar.

COMMENT:- By late 1998 the new funding system is beginning to bite and profits are falling. IHS seems to be aware of the financial consequences. It has built up enormous political capital by its donations to politicians. It tries unsuccessfully to capitalise on this by asking government to make an exception for IHS.

REQUEST DENIED? INTEGRATED HEALTH UNLIKELY TO WIN HOME HEALTH WAIVER
Modern Healthcare Aug. 10, 1998 Page 6 News
Eric Weissenstein

Government officials are indicating they probably won't give Integrated Health Services an unusual exemption from the Medicare home health interim payment system. Integrated's chairman is Robert Elkins, M.D, a politically connected businessman who has lavished money on both Republicans and Democrats. He gave nearly $600,000 to the Democratic Party during the 1996 presidential election.

But despite Elkins' push for the exemption, HCFA officials last week expressed deep skepticism about granting a waiver from the interim payment system to Integrated, which is based in Owings Mills, Md. However, there is a possibility the company could get another financial break by different means.

Elkins argues that Integrated deserves the break because it rescued the scandal-plagued First American Health Care, then the nation's largest privately held home health company, in October 1996. The company, previously known as ABC Home Health Services, and its founders had been convicted of Medicare fraud.

The corporation had fallen into Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings when Integrated agreed to buy it from the federal government in a transaction valued at $313 million. The purchase contract contained provisions protecting Integrated from losses, Elkins told Wall Street analysts during a conference call late last month. He said Integrated should be shielded - - - -
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Wall Street is also discounting the possibility. "They (Integrated) view themselves as white knights, bailing out the government and helping to provide access," said one of the analysts who was part of the Elkins conference call. "I would be surprised if they got this. I mean, how do you cut a deal for one guy?"
---------------------------
Elkins was one of the biggest contributors to the Democratic National Committee during the last presidential election. He also attended several of the White House "coffees" at which big donors met with President Clinton.

All Modern Healthcare articles quoted are Copyright by Crain Magazine Communications, Inc.

Sun revolves around health care's changes
Albuquerque Tribune October 08, 1998, Thursday
Leanne Potts and Macario Juarez Jr.

Some health-care industry analysts suggest that long-term care companies, as a group, tend to be undercapitalized, but Sun appears to be more undercapitalized than most.

Beverly Enterprises, the biggest long-term care company in the United States, takes in annual pre-tax revenues totaling 4.3 times the amount of the company's annual debt costs.

Integrated Health Services, another long-term care provider, brings in 2.7 times its debt costs annually.

COMMENT:- IHS seems to realise that the new funding system is already having a major impact on its profits. It mounts an intense lobbying exercise to reverse some of the changes which are hurting it the most. The article below describes how competitors blocked its efforts to do this. The article does not report the money spent by the parties. The outcome follows the donations. Elkins was primarily a donor to the Democrats who supported IHS plan. His opponents donated more to the majority Republicans and they scuppered it.

NURSING HOME SKIRMISH: BATTLE OVER COST-BASED REIMBURSEMENTS SPLITS INDUSTRY
Modern Healthcare October 26, 1998

As the smoke cleared from last week's passage of the massive federal spending package, nursing home chains were licking their wounds from an internal fight over a proposal that would have redistributed billions of dollars in Medicare skilled-nursing payments from one segment of the long-term-care industry to another.
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The proposal was backed by Owings Mills, Md.-based Integrated Health Services, the nation's third-largest nursing home chain, and two major long-term-care groups, the American Health Care Association and the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging.
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And each side enlisted giants of inside-the-Beltway healthcare lobbying to aid them. Integrated's chairman, Robert Elkins, M.D., a major Democratic contributor, along with nursing home executive Alan Solomont, a Democratic contributor and a 1996 presidential campaign fund-raiser, persuaded the White House to support Integrated's position.

But Beverly countered with the lobbying clout of Michael Bromberg, the one-time head of the Federation of American Health Systems and a well-connected Republican lobbyist.

In the end, Bromberg, Beverly and HRC ManorCare won. The proposal failed because it could not generate enough support to be included in the omnibus budget bill passed early last week, despite the support of the Clinton administration and such top Democrats as Senate Minority Leader Thomas Daschle of South Dakota.

Integrated, AHCA and AAHSA were pushing to overhaul the Medicare prospective payment system for skilled-nursing facilities. Their objective was a return to cost-based reimbursement for such nontherapeutic ancillary items as drugs, laboratory tests and respiratory therapy.

The PPS for SNFs went into effect July 1.
-----------------------------------
Nursing home chains such as Integrated-which have specialized in post-acute care-claimed the PPS did not fully account for the high drug and laboratory costs accrued by complicated cases.

COMMENT:- The falling profits must be disclosed in IHS reports. They begin to realise the position they are in. They start selling off those areas where they are not going to make money - the home health nursing business they have just bought is an obvious choice - but who is going to buy a lemon? Everyone is trying to sell home care.

The company is not prepared to admit that its strategies were wrong. It remains positive about its long term prospects. What is clear is that the sort of care people are going to receive is going to be dramatically influenced by economic decisions made during political horse trading and by the board room responses to the crisis. Whether aging citizens get assistance with nursing in their own homes, live in an assisted living complexes, or get nursing home care is being determined primarily by abstract economic decisions made in totally different contexts. Clinical considerations are very secondary. 

Integrated Health Services Reports Third Quarter
PR Newswire October 30, 1998

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) today announced revenues and earnings for the third quarter ended September 30, 1998.

Integrated Health Reports Net Loss
The Washington Post October 31, 1998

Integrated Health Services Inc. of Owings Mills, Md., reported a third-quarter loss of $ 158.3 million, compared with a profit of $ 18.3 million a year ago, but the recent quarter included a one-time charge of $ 201.2 million to account for the planned sale of its home health nursing business.
-----------------------------
IHS provides an array of health services, including nursing-home care and home-respiratory care.

For the first nine months of the year, the company lost $ 78.8 million, compared with earnings of $ 28.4 million for the first nine months of 1997. But this year's figures also were depressed by the one-time charge.

Changes in federal Medicare reimbursements have eroded the financial performance of the home health nursing division, prompting the company to put it up for sale, chief executive Robert N. Elkins said in a statement. Next year, Medicare reimbursement changes are likely to depress earnings, but they will be positive for the company over the long run, IHS said.

Home nursing unit to be sold; Integrated Health says Medicare squeeze jeopardizes viability; $ 200 million charge; Health care
The Baltimore Sun October 31, 1998

Integrated Health Services Inc. said yesterday that it will sell its home nursing division because of lower Medicare payments, a move that led the Owings Mills company to post a charge of more than $ 200 million in the quarter that ended Sept. 30.
--------------------------------
After the charge, Integrated posted a loss of $ 158.3 million for the quarter, compared with a profit of $ 18.3 million in the year-ago period. Integrated also said it would take an earnings hit next year -- as much as 17 percent below this year's levels -- as the federal Medicare program shifts to a new formula for nursing home reimbursements.
-----------------------------
"Management has made it clear that the new reimbursement will have an adverse impact but the impact is less than some had feared," said John F. Hindelong, an analyst for Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette in New York.

Similarly, Robert M. Mains, a health care analyst with Advest Inc. in Albany, N.Y., said the market welcomed the news of the home nursing sell-off. Home health, like nursing homes, has been under tighter Medicare reimbursement.
---------------------------
Marc B. Levin, executive vice president, said Integrated still considers home nursing "a critical service and an important part of the network" but that given the "dramatic cut" in reimbursements, "from a financial standpoint it was not viable for us to continue to operate it."

SPURNING HOME HEALTH HEALTHSOUTH CEO: WANING INTEREST CAUSING NOV. 1 EXIT
Modern Healthcare Nov. 2, 1998 Page 6 News

In what was viewed as a no-news item by Wall Street analysts, Birmingham, Ala.-based HealthSouth Corp. said last week that it would terminate its home health operations as of Nov. 1.
------------------------------
"That still nets us out at about $300 million," Scrushy said, referring to the $400 million gain he said the company made on the sale of most of Horizon's long-term-care assets to Owings Mills, Md.-based Integrated Health Services soon after the acquisition.
----------------------------------------
Vencor, a Louisville, Ky.-based long-term-care company, announced in May it was getting out of the home-care business. On Friday, IHS announced that it will sell its home health nursing division.

COMMENT:- Market analysts have seen the falling profits in the large corporate chains. They respond negatively by downgrading the industry. Instead of accepting the risk of bankruptcy, sectors of the market see this as an opportunity. They are buying IHS bonds. Note the way they accept that care will be downgraded in order to maintain profits. This does not concern them. That care will be compromised when there is less money is logical and we all know this. Corporations, regulators and politicians all maintain the illusion that cost cutting will not degrade care. Some even claim it will be improved because cost cutting improves efficiency.

Several Nursing Home Companies Placed on S&P CreditWatch Negative
PR Newswire November 3, 1998

Standard & Poor's today placed its ratings for several nursing home companies on CreditWatch with negative implications (see list below). The CreditWatch listings affect over $8 billion in rated debt.
----------------------------
RATINGS PLACED ON CREDITWATCH WITH NEGATIVE IMPLICATIONS

Integrated Health Services Inc.

Corporate credit rating - - - - - B+
Subordinated debt- - - - - - - - B-
Bank loan rating - - - - - - - - B+

Healthcare Sector: Poor Results, Good Investments
High Yield Report November 9, 1998

Most companies in the industry are reporting their quarterly earnings numbers this week and last week and, as expected, the picture is not pretty. Stock prices on some of them got hit on the news, but the bonds are offering some good buying opportunities, according to investors.

Margie Patel, investor at the Third Avenue Fund, said she is increasing her holdings of Sun Healthcare Group,- - - - - . Patel also is increasing Columbia/HCA Healthcare, which also missed expectations. - - - -

She is increasing her exposure because the bond prices are simply getting so cheap, she said. And the new standardized payment system, which is the cause of the poor results industry-wide, will be a short-term problem that is resolved, she said.

"You can't bankrupt the entire system ... somebody has to take care of these people," she said.

Many more investors would probably like to get into the sector because of its inherent domestic nature, but they are cautious due to the new "prospective payment system."

This payment system is an attempt to establish a national basis for healthcare costs and is forcing long-term health care providers to undergo major cost-cutting. Those cost-cutting moves typically include layoffs, less time spent with patients, and lower- paid professionals delivering the care. - - -
---------------------------------
- - people are now realizing the market may have overreacted.

Integrated Health Services, as one example, was in the low 80s last month and was trading in the mid 90s last week, he said. Integrated has three issues: 10.25% of '06 totaling $150 million; 9.5% of '02 with $450 million outstanding; and 9.25% of '08 totaling $500 million.

ABANDONING SHIP: IHS, POST-ACUTE CHAINS JOIN OTHER HOME-CARE DROPOUTS
Modern Healthcare November 09, 1998

Even the big dogs are starting to whimper.

Hit by lower Medicare reimbursement rates under a transitional payment system implemented in October 1997, Medicare-certified home health agencies are leaving the business in droves.

More than 1,200 have closed this year, according to the National Association for Home Care.
-------------------
The latest company to abandon that strategy is industry giant Integrated Health Services, a post-acute care firm based in Owings Mills, Md.

IHS, which provides post-acute services in 47 states, said late last month that it will sell its home-care operations, which include agencies at 500 locations in 29 states.

In an Oct. 30 conference call with investors, IHS Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Robert Elkins said the decision to leave home health nursing was ''the end of a very unfortunate experience for IHS. We went into home health because we felt it was a natural extension of post-acute care.'' But, he said, ''it is our belief that there is no relief for home care in the short or intermediate term.''

Elkins and IHS led an unsuccessful attempt in Congress this year to carve out ancillary services from the prospective payment system for skilled nursing, IHS' core business. The change, which failed to make it into the omnibus budget bill, was opposed by nursing home chains that benefit from the current system (Oct. 26, p. 6).
-------------------------------
Over the past two years, IHS had rapidly expanded its home-care business through acquisitions. But under the new payment system, those businesses could no longer operate profitably, Elkins said.

The interim payment system for Medicare home health imposes per- visit and per-beneficiary caps. Agencies say these are too low to cover actual costs.
----------------------
Andrew Gitkin, a New York-based analyst at Salomon Smith Barney, said IHS probably made a mistake by getting into home healthcare in the first place.

''(IHS managers) miscalculated the reimbursement environment. They tried their hardest to make it work, but it was a losing battle,'' he said.
--------------------------------
Other long-term-care companies, including Atlanta-based Mariner Post-Acute Network, are paring their home-care holdings as well, he said. ''But there is no other publicly traded company that has as much exposure in home health as IHS.''

IHS' 500 home health agencies generate about 16% of the company's total annual revenues of $3 billion, Gitkin said.
-------------------
Until recently, IHS maintained that growing its home health business was part of an overall strategy to provide a continuum of care for its patients. In a March 1998 SEC filing, the company said it was expanding its home healthcare services to take advantage of payers' interest in having healthcare provided in the lowest-cost setting possible.
-------------------
Kathleen Dodd, president of the Corridor Group, an Overland Park, Kan.-based post-acute-care consulting group, said integration of post-acute services is overrated.

''The idea was to be a one-stop shop,'' Dodd said. Theoretically, offering services along the continuum of post-acute-care allows a company to feed patients from one operating unit to another. But many companies, including IHS, apparently were unable to make such cross-referrals profitable, she said

Part of the problem, Dodd said, is that some companies were interested in their home health units less from an operations standpoint than from a financial one.

''The recognized cost-shift that was out there was a windfall for a lot of large organizations,'' she said. Under the new reimbursement system, companies can charge Medicare only minimal overhead costs.

Although the interim payment system went into effect a year ago, many home health agencies are only now responding. ''I call it the deer-in-the-headlights syndrome.'' Dodd said. ''Now they are all unfreezing.''

All Modern Healthcare articles quoted are Copyright by Crain Magazine Communications, Inc.

PROSPECTIVE PAY TAKES TOLL ON HEALTHCARE SECTOR
Bank Letter December 21, 1998

Healthcare companies are flocking back to the bank market to loosen covenants on their credit agreements as they wrestle with Medicare's prospective pay system, bankers said. The prospective pay system introduces fixed reimbursement for service providers and will likely reduce their revenue, an event that could make some companies breach their covenants. The new system will start being phased in Jan. 1, 1999. Companies currently seeking amendments to the credit agreements reportedly include Mariner Post-Acute Network and Integrated Health Services. Sun Healthcare and Genesis Health Ventures are among companies that have already altered leverage covenants.

One banker noted, "If the deals were done today, there wouldn't be so much leverage." - - - - - IHS has been trading in the 96 range for some time, added a trader. If both companies are granted an amendment and increase the pricing on their facilities, traders expect the credits to trade up.

COMMENT:- IHS' Home Nursing Care is eventually sold - for a pittance but they have little choice. Another way of raising cash when you are short is to sell the homes or hospital to another entity then lease them back. Alpha Healthcare did this in Australia when it was under pressure recently. IHS also tried it.

MEDSHARES BUY EXPANDS HOME CARE; MEDICARE CUTS CREATE OPPORTUNITY, FOUNDER SAYS
The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) February 2, 1999

Medshares Inc., a Memphis-based home health care company, completed its largest acquisition Monday, buying the home nursing division of Integrated Health Services.
---------------------
"All this devastation in the industry has created a buying opportunity for us, as a privately held company with cash and no shareholders to answer to," Winters said. "We are able to buy up the industry at relatively low prices."

TENET THINKS IT HAS A WINNER IN ITS PHILLY REHABILITATION EFFORT
Modern Healthcare April 19, 1999

A home bath. Companies that snapped up home health agencies at a premium as little as three years ago are now unloading them for a pittance, according to recent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The fire sales are the industry's reaction to Medicare reimbursement cuts for home nursing under the 1997 balanced-budget law.

To give just two examples:

Owings Mills, Md.-based Integrated Health Services disclosed it had sold part of its home health agency business for $12.7 million. The February sale, to Medshares/IHS Acquisition, an affiliate of Memphis, Tenn.-based Medshares, included 69 agencies with 251 locations. The sale works out to about $51,000 per location.

IHS acquired the bulk of its home health agencies in 1996, when it agreed to pay about $772,500 per site-$309 million in total-to acquire the 400 sites owned by First American Health Care of Georgia, Brunswick. That figure includes $155 million payable in instalments starting next year.

IHS and new parent company operating as Soleus Healthcare
Sarasota Herald-Tribune July 24, 1999, Saturday

Following its sale this year, IHS Home Care has changed its name to Soleus Healthcare Services, the company said.
-----------------------------------
The changes stem from the sale of IHS Home Care this year. IHS was a division of Integrated Health Services Inc. of Owings Mills, Md., a company that also operates nursing and other long-term-care facilities.

MEDSHARES FILES FOR CHAPTER 11
The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) July 30, 1999,

Medshares Inc. of Memphis and Soleus affiliated home health care companies filed for U.S. Bankruptcy Court protection Thursday after running out of cash and being cut off by their lender.

Medshares was forced to restructure its operations 10 months after buying 70 home health agencies from Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp. of Nashville, and six months after making its largest acquisition, the home nursing division of Integrated Health Services.

Integrated Health Services Sells 32 Facilities for $135 Million to Pay Down Debt
PR Newswire January 22, 1999

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) announced that it has sold 32 facilities to Monarch Properties, L.P. for approximately $135 million in net cash proceeds. The funds will be used to pay down debt. Monarch Properties is a newly formed private company.

Monarch has leased these facilities to consolidated subsidiaries of Lyric Health Care LLC an entity 50% owned by IHS. Lyric has hired IHS as manager to operate the facilities and will pay IHS a management and franchise fee.

COMMENT:- IHS already leases nursing homes from Omega, a REIT. Omega bails it out when it needs some cash. They both need to get a home working to generate some money.

West Palm nursing home receives $ 28.9 million in new financing
PALM BEACH DAILY BUSINESS REVIEW February 10, 1999

Central Park Lodges of West Palm Beach Inc. has refinanced a nursing home at 2939 S. Haverhill Road.

Omega Healthcare Investors loaned $ 28.9 million to the company, which is affiliated with Integrated Health Services Inc. in Owings Mills, Md.
----------------------------------
The 120-unit facility was built in 1991 and went into foreclosure before

completion.

COMMENT:- The financial position gets worse and worse. Like Sun and Vencor, IHS sacks thousands. Either people were receiving care which they did not need when it was profitable or people are not getting the care they need now because it is no longer profitable.

They also try to sell off RoTech, a company bought a little more than a year ago.

Integrated Health Services Announces Fourth Quarter Expectations
PR Newswire February 11, 1999

In response to the Medicare prospective payment system, the company has experienced a reduction in demand for therapy services in its contract rehabilitation division. Customers of the company's contract rehabilitation division are admitting fewer Medicare patients and are reducing utilization of rehabilitative services. The reduction of services has also resulted in a lower productivity of therapists. The company has eliminated 1,000 positions and expects further reductions. More detailed information will be available at the time of the company's formal release of year-end results, in March 1999

Integrated Health Services Exploring Strategic Alternatives
PR Newswire February 11, 1999

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) today announced that the Board of Directors has authorized the company to explore the monetization of its RoTech Division. Alternatives being considered include an initial public offering for all or part of RoTech or a sale of the division to a financial or strategic purchaser. Additionally, the company has confirmed that there have been discussions with financial organizations interested in a leveraged buyout and these discussions are on-going

 

Health chain turns pale; IHS has suffered 82% stock plunge, cut 1,000 jobs; Medical services
THE BALTIMORE SUN February 21, 1999
M. William Salganik

But recently:

The stock lost more than 80 percent of its value, plummeting from a 52-week high of $39.375 in April to an all-time low of $7.0625 on Friday.

IHS warned Feb. 11 that earnings for the last quarter of 1998 are likely to be 35 to 45 cents a share, not the 75 cents expected by analysts.

The company took a charge of more than $200 million in the third quarter of last year to cover losses in its home care division and to write down the subsidiary's assets.

IHS was forced to eliminate 1,000 jobs in its contract therapy division and was expecting " further reductions" in its overall work force of more than 80,000 employees in 47 states.
----------------------------
The upheaval has meant a shift in strategy for IHS, one of the pioneers in revolutionizing nursing home care.
------------------------------
Ball and chain'

In August, it sold its pharmacy operations, saying they were too small to be efficient. This month, it sold its money-losing home care division. "Home care has been a ball and chain for them," Ray said.

Then, to raise cash to reduce debt and boost the sagging stock price, the company announced it might sell or spin off all or part of its successful RoTech division, which provides patients with home respiratory therapy and durable medical equipment, such as wheelchairs.

"Clearly, they're focusing more of their efforts on the nursing home side," said Mains, the Advent analyst.
----------------------------
IHS officials declined to be interviewed for this article. But in its Feb. 11 earnings warning, IHS said the new Medicare system seemed to be working about as expected in its subacute facilities but had caused a big drop in volume for its contract rehabilitation therapy division, which provides therapy to other nursing homes.

In the short term, IHS is looking to reduce its debt load. In January, for example, it sold 32 nursing homes for $135 million in cash to a real estate investment trust founded by Elkins.

The REIT, in turn, leases them to a company owned half by IHS and half by an IHS board member. The leasing company hires IHS to run the homes.

A sale of RoTech could raise a lot more cash. Several analysts estimate its value at about $1.2 billion.
---------------------------
Market share doesn't help if costs exceed reimbursement, so IHS and the other companies are struggling to adjust.

Mains said of the industry, "In the real long term, it's going to be fine. There's a growing demand and limited supply."

But all of the analysts expect the industry to languish for several quarters -- perhaps several years -- as it adjusts to the new reimbursements. "1999 is just going to be a disastrous year for the nursing home industry, probably the most difficult year they're going to have," Monroe said.

"Until the Bob Elkinses of the world figure out the next great wave for nursing homes, it's going to be a period of change and slow growth."

5 Healthcare Firms Ratings Cut By S&P Over Medicare Changes
Dow Jones Newswires March 3, 1999

The ratings for these companies - Genesis Health Ventures Inc., Integrated Health Services Inc., Mariner Post-Acute Network Inc., NovaCare Inc., and Sun Healthcare Group Inc. - remain on CreditWatch with negative implications, S&P said.

RATINGS LOWERED AND REMAINING ON CREDITWATCH NEGATIVE
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Integrated Health Services Inc. - - - - - To - - - - - From

Corporate credit rating ____________ B- ______ B+
Subordinated debt _______________ CCC ______ B-
Bank loan rating ________________ B- ______ B+

Integrated Health Services Reports Fourth Quarter and Year-End Results
PR Newswire March 9, 1999

In response to the Medicare prospective payment system, the Company has experienced a substantial reduction in demand for therapy services in its contract rehabilitation division which has adversely impacted earnings. Customers of the company's contract rehabilitation division are admitting fewer Medicare patients and are reducing utilization of rehabilitative services. The Company believes that the reduction in admission of Medicare patients is due to fears of smaller operations over their ability to cope with the new Medicare PPS -- both financially and administratively.

In order to address the revenue fall-off and reduced Medicare admissions, the Company will be reducing costs and will be working with its customers to help them better understand how to operate under PPS. The Company eliminated 1,000 positions in December and transitioned its therapists from salary to hourly. Additionally, the Company is implementing wage reductions and will pay its therapists only for productive time.

COMMENT:- We still have the same patients with the same illnesses but when the funding is changed so that providing therapies is no longer very profitable, the demand for therapies vanishes. The way in which the market sees no further than the glib explanation that demand has fallen is well illustrated in the next article. This is the way people who are now responsible for the welfare of the sick and vulnerable think.

IHS TAKES OUT KNIFE TO REGAIN PROFITABILITY
Modern Healthcare March 15, 1999

When the going gets rough, long-term-care companies get tough.

Faced with lower revenues from Medicare for skilled-nursing patients under a new prospective payment system, Integrated Health Services has kicked off a leaner, meaner strategy it hopes will juice up profits.

In recent months, IHS has laid off staff, cut salaries, jettisoned a money-losing business and explored the possibility of selling a profitable business. Early returns indicate the downsizing is working.

Although Owings Mills, Md.-based IHS reported a net loss of $68 million in 1998, it posted net income of $10.8 million on $719 million in revenues for the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31, 1998.

IHS has engineered its turnaround by cutting expenses faster than revenues are falling.

Late last year, the company saw a sharp decline in revenues from its contract rehabilitation division. IHS provides contract rehabilitation services at 1,200 locations and operates 326 nursing homes and other long-term-care facilities.

In response to the revenues drop-off, the division trimmed 1,000 therapists and lowered salaries for the remaining 5,000. In addition, the company now pays only for productive time,'' when therapists are actually seeing patients. The company has also cut its contribution to employees' health benefits and may also downsize the company itself.

In February, the company said it was exploring a sale of RoTech, its home oxygen and infusion unit. The company had just sold its 69 home health agencies with 251 locations in 22 states to Memphis, Tenn.-based Medshares.

IHS had considered selling its lithotripsy and diagnostics units but abandoned the idea when it was unable to get what it considered a fair price, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Robert Elkins told investors last week.

IHS will try to sell RoTech, which it values at $1.5 billion, in the next six months, Elkins said. In the fourth quarter 1998, RoTech earned $41.3 million before interest, taxes and other adjustments on $146.6 million in revenues.

Integrated Health Services Amends Credit Agreement
PR Newswire April 2, 1999

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) today announced that it has amended its $2.15 billion credit facility. The credit facility consists of a $1 billion revolving credit facility and a $1.15 billion term loan. Citibank, N.A. acted as administrative agent, with 81 other lenders participating in the credit facility. The amendments to the credit facility include revisions to the financial covenants to reflect the financial impact of the Medicare prospective payment system.

COMMENT:- That the problems are primarily due to the business and patient care policies of the companies and were only precipitated by the funding changes is illustrated in the following article.

Outcry Grows Over Nursing Home PPS Losses, But Some Are Doing Fine.
Medicine & Health April 26, 1999

Perhaps the most dramatic evidence of the new straightened circumstances in which nursing home owners find themselves was the decision last month by Standard & Poor's to lower the debt ratings on five major operators: Genesis Health Ventures, Integrated Health Services, Mariner Post-Acute Network, NovaCare, and Sun Healthcare Group. Those five were singled out because they are highly leveraged and S&P said it had worries about "the increasing impact of PPS on corporations laden with substantial debt."
-----------------
But not every long term care facility is hurting. For one thing, many never went after Medicare business, so they are unaffected by the change. A lot of not-for-profit homes have relied heavily on private-pay residents, often those from churches or other organizations affiliated with the home's sponsor.

But even with Medicare business, many of what Greub calls "plain vanilla" nursing home firms are doing okay with PPS. The new payments for their patients are lower than before, but not precipitously so. Where Medicare may be paying $ 250 a day for a patient now, that represents a halving of the rates Sun had been receiving, but a drop in the $ 50-75 range for Beverly Enterprises or HCR Manor Care. Moreover, those chains have been operating relatively efficiently - an attribute that was not rewarded in the cost-plus system of compensation. They now can reap the benefits of their leaner operations.

In addition, one expert in the field notes, the winners and loser under the new system "sort of has to do with how much you gamed the system in the first place." Those who didn't let the reimbursement system become the basis of their treatment strategy now are doing better than those who depended on finding techniques to wring every last dollar out of Medicare.

Integrated Health Services Reports First Quarter
PR Newswire April 30, 1999

The decline in revenue and earnings are primarily the result of the implementation of the Medicare prospective payment system (PPS).

COMMENT:- How odd that IHS customers (presumably the hospitals and doctors whose funding is DRG based and not changed by the new payment system) are no longer admitting Medicare patients. One can only wonder whether the common corporate practice of securing admissions by paying kickbacks has been abolished now that Medicare patients are no longer profitable.

Integrated Health surprises with loss of 13 a share; Medicare-payment change is blamed; Health care
THE BALTIMORE SUN May 1, 1999

Integrated Health Services Inc. said yesterday that it had a net loss of $6.6 million, or 13 cents a share, in its first quarter, a result the company attributed to the adverse impact of a new Medicare payment system. For the first quarter of 1998, the Owings Mills-based company posted net earnings of $37.6 million, or 73 cents a share.
----------------------
"The new reimbursement system is having a dramatic change on the way care is delivered in nursing homes," Levin said. "It's not a short-term phenomenon."
----------------------------
Also, yesterday, IHS released the proxy statement it filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that showed Robert N. Elkins, the chairman and chief executive officer, was paid $809,935 in 1998.

Integrated Health Services to Operate NovaCare's Contract Rehabilitation Division
PR Newswire May 28, 1999

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) announced that effective June 1, 1999 it will operate, through a management agreement, NovaCare, Inc.'s (NYSE: NOV) long-term care contract rehabilitation division which was sold to a newly formed company. The transaction will enable IHS to increase the market density of its existing contract rehabilitation division called RehabWorks.

Under the terms of the agreement, Chance Murphy, Inc. a newly formed company will acquire the long term care contract rehabilitation business from NovaCare for a nominal amount. Chance Murphy, Inc. has hired IHS to manage the business under a comprehensive long term management agreement whereby the management fee will equal substantially all of the cash flow of the operations.

COMMENT:- The corporate lobby appears to be persuading government to bail them out and the market responds by buying IHS.

IHS LEADS HEALTH CARE COME BACK AS GOVERNMENT MULLS PROBLEMS
Bank Letter May 3, 1999

Integrated Health Services led a sharp rebound by several health care service providers last week as $ 30 million of the company's bank debt changed hands at 91 1/2-93 in secondary trading. Bankers noted IHS was trading up from a low point of 88 1/2 three weeks ago and said efforts by health care companies to attract the government's attention to their plight had improved investor sentiment in the sector.

"Once the government gets involved, things start to change a little bit," one banker said. The trades were mainly taking place in the Street. "Dealers are offering it in the Street market and institutional guys and high-yield guys are buying it," a trader said. IHS' $ 2.15 billion credit is led by Toronto-Dominion Bank and Citigroup. Officials at the company did not return calls.

Integrated Health chief took a cut in '98; No bonus for Elkins as earnings disappoint; Executive pay
THE BALTIMORE SUN May 8, 1999

He did collect $809,935 in salary. In 1997, Elkins picked up $752,277 in pay and $3.25 million in bonuses.

The company, which is based in Owings Mills and operates nursing homes and other health businesses, agreed to pay $14 million in severance and other payments to its departing president, Lawrence P. Cirka.
----------------------------
Elkins, who founded the company in 1986, receives a bonus equal to his annual salary if the company meets earnings goals set by the board of directors, according to the proxy statement.
-----------------------------------
He also received bonuses over the past few years tied to the sale of IHS' pharmacy division, the spinoff of a subsidiary and the acquisition of a home health company that has since been sold.
-------------------------
Integrated stock, which traded at nearly $40 a share a year ago, fell 25 cents in trading yesterday to close at $4.50 a share.

IHS reports loss of 10 cents a share for second quarter; Reduced payments by Medicare blamed; Earnings
The Baltimore Sun, July 22, 1999

Integrated Health Services Inc. said yesterday that it had a net loss of $4.6 million, or 10 cents a share, in its second quarter, a result the company attributed to the continuing adverse impact of a new Medicare payment system

Bankruptcy of Health Care Operators Could Signal Health for Sickly REITs
TheStreet.com September 20, 1999 Monday

Could it get any worse for the chronically ill health care real estate investment trusts? Having spent much of the year in intensive care -- the average health care REIT has lost 18.7% so far this year, and yes, that includes an average dividend of more than 12% -- the group tested investors' faith again when health care operator Vencor (VCRI:Nasdaq OTC BB) filed for bankruptcy last week. That filing put into doubt the viability of both Vencor and its sister REIT, Ventas (VTR:NYSE), which derives 99% of its revenue from Vencor -occupied facilities.

More Challenges Ahead

The real test for health care REITs will be when one of the troubled major operators files for bankruptcy. "Who's next?" asks Sutro & Co. analyst Craig Silvers. "There are a number following close behind" Ventas. Sources say health care operators in financial distress include Sun Healthcare Group (SHG:NYSE), Mariner Post-Acute Network (MPN:NYSE), Integrated Health Services (IHS:NYSE), Balanced Care (BAL:Amex) and Assisted Living Concepts (ALF:Amex). All lease properties from health care REITs.

 



FINANCIAL COLLAPSE
(to contents)

As profits continue to plummet, and IHS is unable to find buyers the message gets through to the market. The downward slide is swift - negative reviews, delisting from the stock market, an inability to meet interest payments, and finally chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Integrated Health Services Makes Announcements
PR Newswire October 19, 1999, Tuesday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) today announced that it has suspended its efforts to sell its RoTech division. The Company indicated it had not received an acceptable offer for the sale of the division. The Company had previously disclosed that it was exploring the sale of its RoTech division which provides diversified home respiratory care and durable medical equipment products.

The Company also announced that it anticipates a loss for the third quarter ended September 30, 1999 which will exceed the loss in the second quarter ended June 30, 1999. The Company expects to announce third quarter results in November.

The Medicare Prospective Payment System has had a dramatically negative impact on the industry and Integrated Health Services' revenues, cash flow and liquidity. IHS has retained Warburg Dillon Read, LLC as its advisors and KPMG LLP as its consultants to analyze strategic alternatives including restructuring the Company's debt, selling assets other than RoTech, and raising additional capital, among other things. The Company anticipates beginning preliminary discussions with its senior lenders shortly. Its advisors and consultants will be assisting in these discussions, as well as in pursuing other strategic alternatives.

Cost Plus Added to S&P SmallCap 600 Index
Business Wire October 20, 1999, Wednesday

Oct. 20, 1999--Standard & Poor's will replace Integrated Health Services (NYSE:IHS) in the S&P SmallCap 600 Index with Cost Plus (NASDAQ:CPWM) after the close of trading on Thursday, October 21, 1999. Integrated Health Services is being removed for lack of representation.

Briefs from Sparks, Baltimore
Associated Press Newswires 10/21/1999

SPARKS, Md. (AP) - Integrated Health Services has hired consultants to help prepare for the sale of its assets, a debt restructuring, or possible bankruptcy.

The Sparks-based chain of nursing homes has lost millions in recent months, due in large part to reductions in reimbursements from the federal government.

IHS's stock, which was valued at $40 earlier this year, closed at 25 cents Wednesday, making it nearly impossible to secure new investment.

The company listed its debt at $3.4 billion with assets of $5.4 billion in documents filed with the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission.

However, $3 billion of the company's assets are estimates of the worth of various purchases by IHS based on the profits of those companies.

Few of those acquisitions are still making a profit.

COMMENT:- Note the way in which the market analysts comments on IHS intention to offset payment reductions by increasing the number of days patients spend in its centres. They see nothing wrong or immoral in keeping patients in a nursing home longer than needed. It is simply a business decision. A business decision by the insurers has prevented it. Sick people are in the system to generate profits and their care has consequently been determined by which powerful group gets its way and so the profits - in this case the insurers. This is the new world of corporate medicine.

Reform flattens health provider; Care: Integrated Health Services has plummeted within two years, a victim of Medicaid reform and ill-fated decisions.
THE BALTIMORE SUN October 31, 1999, Sunday ,FINAL

Integrated Health Services Inc., the Sparks-based health care giant that flourished by undercutting higher-cost hospitals, finds itself on the critical list, thanks in part to the same cost-cutting pressures that fueled its spectacular growth.

Weighed down by staggering debt and shrinking revenue, the once-pioneering IHS warned this month of growing losses and a squeeze on cash flow. It hired investment house Warburg Dillon Reed LLC and business consultant KPMG LLP to assist in talks with lenders and to develop strategies.

The company's plight has put it on analysts' watch list of big companies in the industry that might seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

"I think the writing is on the wall for them," said Premila Peters, high-yield analyst for KDP Investment Advisors in Montpelier, Vt. " The question of the day is how much cash do they have left to keep going."

Analysts think a bankruptcy filing could come by year's end.
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The company's mounting woes have erased more than $2 billion in shareholder wealth, reducing its market value to $14.9 million as IHS stock has plummeted from $40 in June of 1998 to 28.13 cents Friday.

Analysts say several miscalculations by IHS created the reckoning it faces.

Among them:

The company incorrectly assumed it could reduce operational costs faster than it lost revenue from Medicare payments. It is still struggling to bring down costs.

IHS assumed that it could offset some payment reductions by increasing the number of days patients stayed at its centers. But insurance limits on the time patients can stay at sub-acute centers crimped that plan.

The company did not foresee that customers and payments for ancillary or rehabilitation therapy for such patients as stroke victims would decline, further depressing revenue.

Though IHS and other health providers blame the new Medicare payment system for their plight, analysts say company executives contributed to the problems with acquisitions, repurchases of company stock and taking on more debt even as the budget ax was falling.

"They didn't take steps they could have to conserve cash. Cash is king. Now they are sitting on a ton of debt," said Peters at KDP.

In its Oct. 19 announcement, the company, which carries $3.4 billion in debt, also disclosed that it was suspending an effort to sell its RoTech division.
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The company's debts are tied, in part, to a string of acquisitions IHS made between 1994 and 1998, as part of a bold strategy to broaden services.

Integrated Health Services was founded in 1986 by Dr. Robert N. Elkins, a 55- year-old Ivy League-trained physician, who saw opportunity in the national push to hold the lid on health care costs. He built a network of centers that provided rehabilitation services and sub-acute care for those released from hospitals but too sick to go home, specialty therapy services for nursing home residents and home care services.

The reclusive Elkins, who serves as IHS's chairman, chief executive officer and president, declined to be interviewed about the company's situation, as did other company executives.
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Standard & Poor's has lowered its credit rating on the company to near "junk" bond status, a move that makes it impossible to borrow further to make debt payments. The company's bonds currently trade for about 6 cents on the dollar.

The string of bad news comes as the company sets up operations and 1,500 employees at a new multimillion-dollar headquarters in Highland Business Park north of Hunt Valley.

Spending on improvements such as the new headquarters building, and IHS's $24 million stock buyback program this year came at a time when the company should have been conserving cash to weather the transition to the new Medicare payment system, say analysts.

Such decisions in the face of revenue cuts fueled Wall Street's flight from the company.

The changed times are a marked contrast to the heady days of 1994 when the company raised $100 million in a third public offering of its shares on Wall Street.
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The new system has been particularly tough on IHS because the company had invested heavily in so- called ancillary care services, such as respiratory therapy, in an effort to be a one-stop provider for those needing medical care outside a hospital, said Maines, the industry analyst.

Linda Keegan, vice president for the American Health Care Association in Washington, says companies such as IHS which invested heavily in providing rehabilitative services, have been hit particularly hard by a PPS provision that places a $1,500 a year ceiling on patients needing such services.
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Maines, the industry analyst, said, "It's like an executive in the industry told me the other day: 'This isn't a life preserver. It's a piece of driftwood.' "

Provider IHS unable to pay bond interest; Integrated Health skips $7.7 million in debt obligation
BALTIMORE SUN November 2, 1999, Tuesday ,FINAL

Integrated Health Services Inc. announced yesterday that it will not make a required interest payment on $150 million in bonds, the latest sign that the Sparks-based health-services provider is facing a severe liquidity crisis.

IHS' decision to skip the $7.7 million in interest payments that was due yesterday comes on the heels of two consecutive quarterly losses totaling more than $10 million, significant layoffs and a sharp drop in the value of its common stock.

The company's stock closed yesterday at 31.25 cents a share, up 3.125 cents, before the company's announcement. In April last year, IHS' stock traded for $39.375.
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IHS officials did not respond to telephone calls yesterday.
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IHS said that under the terms of the senior subordinated notes on which the interest was due, it has a 30-day grace period before a default on its debt would occur.

The company could face having to pay the full value of the $150 million worth of notes if the interest payment is not made within the grace period.

Integrated Health Services Reports Third Quarter And Makes Other Announcements
PR Newswire November 15, 1999, Monday

As a result of the financial results for the third quarter, the company is out of compliance with certain financial covenants in its bank credit facility. The Company will be seeking a waiver to its credit agreement, but the Company can not predict when or if a waiver will be obtained. Separately, IHS announced that it has elected not to make the interest payment of approximately $17 million due today under its bank credit facility. The Company has indicated to its senior lenders that the suspension of the interest payment is necessary to preserve liquidity to operate the business. The Company has begun active discussions with its lenders regarding the restructuring of the Company's debt.

Buffeted IHS reports loss in third quarter; Firm not complying with some covenants in bank credit line; Bankruptcy near?; Poor earnings blamed on new Medicare payment method
THE BALTIMORE SUN November 17, 1999, Wednesday ,

Integrated Health Services Inc., the struggling Sparks-based health care provider, yesterday reported a third-quarter loss, and revealed it is not in compliance with certain financial covenants with its bank credit line.

The company also disclosed it did not to make an interest payment of approximately $17 million that was due yesterday. Earlier this month, IHS said it elected not to make a $7.7 million interest payment on $150 million in

Analysts said IHS is likely to file for bankruptcy soon.
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"The implementation of PPS is clearly having a devastating impact on the revenues and cash flow of our industry and IHS," Robert N. Elkins, the company's chairman and chief executive, said in a statement yesterday.

Health Firm in Survival Struggle; Executive Compensation Questioned in Wake of $1.8 Billion Loss
The Washington Post November 19, 1999, Friday

Integrated Health Services Inc., once a powerhouse in the health-care industry, is clinging to the critical list with its vital signs fading.

After growing fast and paying its CEO millions during the 1990s, Integrated has been in a downward spiral in 1999. The company reported this week that it lost $ 1.8 billion in the third quarter as it wrote down the value of assets. It also failed to make two interest payments totaling $ 24.7 million, including $ 17 million due earlier this week. Integrated Health shares, which traded as high as $ 38.37 1/2 in early 1998, closed yesterday at 31 1/4 cents.
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"All this most likely points to a Chapter 11 filing," said Philip Acinapuro, a junk bond analyst for the firm Dabney Flanigan, which specializes in distressed securities. Integrated financed its rapid expansion with junk bonds.
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Integrated was a pioneer in the field of "subacute care," providing care for patients who need round-the-clock nursing services but don't need to remain in a hospital. The strategy was billed as a less-expensive alternative to continued hospitalization and helped differentiate Integrated from traditional nursing-home companies. Integrated expanded through aggressive acquisitions and more than $ 3 billion of borrowing. Much of Integrated Health's revenue--the company had sales of $ 2.9 billion in 1998--comes from Medicare, the federal insurance program for the elderly and disabled.

That reliance left the company badly exposed when the government overhauled Medicare payments under the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, trying to impose what policymakers thought was needed financial discipline. Integrated felt the squeeze in its own nursing homes, even as other nursing homes reduced demand for Integrated's contract services. "Essentially they doubled down the bet on Medicare," said Robert M. Mains, an investment analyst at Advest Inc.

COMMENT The article above writes at length about Elkins financial relationships with IHS. These extracts are in the page on Elkins.

Integrated Health Services Will Miss Payment
Bank Loan Report November 22, 1999

The ailing health care sector recorded its latest casualty last week when Integrated Health Services Inc. announced it will not make a $17 million interest payment due on its $2.15 billion credit facility.

In explaining its decision to suspend the payment, the company cited the necessity of preserving liquidity, blaming changes under the Medicare prospective payment system for continuing shortfalls in earnings.

Operating losses in the third quarter amounted to $41.3 million, a huge increase from the $4.6 million in losses incurred in the second quarter and the $6.6 million lost in the first quarter of this year. In addition, the company took a charge of $1.78 billion, for a net loss of $1.82 billion. Last year, Integrated Health Services posted net earnings of $137 million. Revenues so far this year total $1.9 billion, compared to $3 billion last year.

Hitting bottom ; Aggressive acquisitor Integrated Health Services stung by PPS, takes $1.8 billion in charges
Modern Healthcare November 22, 1999, Monday

After posting what analysts said was the largest bottom-line loss in nursing home history, Integrated Health Services last week defaulted on $17 million in interest due on bank loans and began discussions with lenders to restructure its debt.

The news followed IHS' failure earlier this month to pay $7 million in interest due to bondholders and an announcement in October that it had abandoned efforts to sell its RoTech division, a respiratory therapy provider.

The company's filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission acknowledged that the Sparks, Md.-based company might seek a court-approved reorganization.

Integrated Health Services Elects Not to Make Interest Payment
PR Newswire November 29, 1999, Monday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) today announced that the 30-day grace period for the interest payment due on the Company's $150 million 10.25% Senior Subordinated Notes due 2006 has expired and the Company has elected not to make the interest payment. As previously announced, the Company is in discussions with its lenders regarding the restructuring of the Company's debt.

IHS TRADES DOWN AS SELLERS SHOW UP
Loan Market Week December 13, 1999

Integrated Health Services' term loan "C" paper slipped 3 points last week, as the sudden appearance of a number of sellers drove the price down, according to dealers. Traders said $ 15 million of the paper changed hands in a retail sale at 48, and other potential sellers were seen.
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Traders said IHS' paper is very volatile, which leads to lots of fluctuations in price. --------- The credit is volatile, large and a bunch of sellers showed up.

Integrated Health Services Makes Announcements
PR Newswire December 17, 1999, Friday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) today announced that it has been notified by the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) that it has fallen below its continued listing criteria relating to (a) total stockholders' equity less than $50 million in conjunction with global market capitalization less than $50 million and (b) 30 day average share price less than $1.00.

The Company's common stock will be suspended from trading on the NYSE prior to the opening of the market on Thursday, December 23, 1999, or earlier upon the occurrence of certain events. The Company will take the necessary steps to allow the stock to trade on the over-the-counter Bulletin Board.

BTM REPORTEDLY SELLS IHS
Loan Market Week December 20, 1999

Original lender Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi reportedly auctioned off $ 10 million of Integrated Health Services term loan "C" paper last week, in a move to reduce exposure to the health care sector. One dealer said the bank holds a lot of health care company paper and decided to drop some of IHS' as a way to trim holdings.

Integrated Health Services Addresses OTC Bulletin Board Trading
PR Newswire December 23, 1999, Thursday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. today announced an application has been filed with the National Association of Securities Dealers' OTC Bulletin Board Service to trade IHS common stock. The Company has been notified that approval to begin trading on the OTC Bulletin Board Service will not be obtained prior to the end of the year. The Company anticipates approval will be received in early January.

Integrated Health Services Elects Not to Make Interest Payment
PR Newswire January 3, 2000, Monday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NYSE: IHS) today announced that it has elected not to make the interest payment of approximately $4.1 million due today on the Company's $143.8 million 5.75% Convertible Senior Subordinated Notes due 2001.

IHS misses third debt payment; Another blow befalls one of premier names in institutional care; $4.1 million was due; Firm hopes to sell stock again, but analysts say turnaround is unlikely; Health care
THE BALTIMORE SUN January 4, 2000, Tuesday ,FINAL

The New York Stock Exchange suspended trading in the company's shares Dec. 23. Shares trading for $40 in the summer of 1998 were worth about 17 cents at the end of November.
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But industry analysts say Integrated Health's financial troubles become more difficult to surmount each day, particularly since the company has said its common stock will likely have little or no value even if its debt troubles are resolved.

Integrated Health Services Trading Moves to Over-the-Counter Bulletin Board
PR Newswire January 5, 2000, Wednesday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: IHSV) today announced that its common stock will begin trading on the National Association of Securities Dealers' OTC Bulletin Board Service effective immediately. The stock symbol will be "IHSV."

Nursing-Home Company Shaky Chapter 11 Looms; Firm Has N.M. Sites
Albuquerque Journal January 7, 2000, Friday

Maryland-based Integrated Health Services Inc., which operates 28 nursing homes in New Mexico, will probably file for bankruptcy protection soon, according to a bankruptcy expert and a state health-care official.

Integrated Health of Sparks, Md., said such a filing should be expected during the first quarter of this year, said Steve Dossey, deputy director of the Health Improvement Division of the New Mexico Health Department.

Computer Blamed for Late Pay
The Washington Post January 19, 2000, Wednesday, Final Edition

About 2,000 employees of financially troubled Integrated Health Services Inc. did not get paid as scheduled Friday morning because of a computer error, a spokesman for the Sparks, Md., nursing-home company said yesterday.

Integrated Health Services Elects Not to Make Interest Payment
PR Newswire February 1, 2000, Tuesday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: IHSV) today announced that the 30-day grace period for the interest payment due on the Company's $143.8 million 5.75% Convertible Senior Subordinated Notes due 2001 has expired and the Company has elected not to make the interest payment.



BANKRUPTCY and POSt MORTEMS
(to contents)

IHS accepts bankruptcy and the long process of restructuring starts. It is a time for reflecting about what happened and drawing conclusions. Some spell out the problems but others rationalise and cling to misconceptions.

Integrated Health Services Files Voluntary Petition for Bankruptcy Reorganization; Company to Continue Normal Operations; Receives Commitment for Up To $300 Million in DIP Financing
Company Press Release - Integrated Health Services, Inc.Wednesday February 2,

SPARKS, Md., Feb. 2 /PRNewswire/ -- Integrated Health Services, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: IHSV - news) today announced that IHS and many of its operating subsidiaries have filed voluntary petitions with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware to reorganize under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in order to restructure the company's debt obligations. The company elected to seek court protection in order to facilitate its efforts to restructure its capital and lease obligations.

IHS expansion leads to Chapter 11
Modern Healthcare February 7, 2000, Monday

The bankruptcy filing last week by one of the nation's largest post-acute-care companies was the sharpest nail yet in the coffin of diversification.

Once a leading advocate of the one-stop-shop model for post-acute care, Integrated Health Services is now a leading example of aggressive expansion gone sour.

The Sparks, Md.-based company is the fourth publicly traded long-term-care firm in five months to seek protection from creditors under a Chapter 11 filing. All four were primarily skilled-nursing providers, but each also pursued several lines of business designed to complement its core operations.

And of the four, IHS may have been the most broadly diversified.

"With nursing homes, home care, home oxygen, rehab hospitals and the rest, (IHS) tried to put together a post-acute network of services," said Debra Lawson, a New York-based analyst for Salomon Smith Barney. "That sounds good and looks good on paper but hasn't worked out in practice."

The company operates 400 nursing homes, 17 specialty hospitals and more than 10,000 contracts to provide physical, infusion, oxygen and other therapies to long-term-care patients. It sold its home nursing division in 1999 after changes in the Medicare payment system made that business unprofitable for the company.
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Like Vencor, Sun Healthcare Group and Mariner Post-Acute Network - each of which filed for bankruptcy in recent months-IHS blamed its financial failings on Medicare payment cuts to skilled-nursing facilities.

"There are a lot of similarities among the four. They all had an operating structure that took advantage of the old environment and then the government changed the rules," said A.J. Rice, a New York-based analyst for Merrill Lynch & Co.
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In its voluntary bankruptcy petition, IHS said it had $3.6 billion in assets and $4.1 billion in liabilities.

Analysts point out that the company's rapid expansion before the implementation of the new Medicare payment system for skilled-nursing facilities resulted in a huge debt load. With reduced cash flow, servicing that debt became all but impossible.

Despite its downward spiral, the company apparently went to great lengths to entice its chairman, chief executive officer and president, Robert Elkins, M.D., to stay at its helm. As recently as March 1999 the company lent him $11.5 million to "assist the company in retaining Dr. Elkins on a long-term basis in light of the significantly reduced stock price and loss of equity incentives," according to company filings. That sum brought loans outstanding to Elkins to $37.3 million.

As of the end of 1998 the company also had contributed a total of $18.1 million to Elkins' retirement trust.

Elkins co-founded the company in 1986, after spending four years as a practicing physician and six years as vice president and co-founder of another long-term-care company.

In a written statement, Elkins cast the bankruptcy as a positive move in light of dire circumstances. "The dramatic impact of the implementation of the 1997 Balanced Budget Act on our revenue and cash flow severely impacted the company's ability to service our current capital structure," he said. "We believe we are taking the appropriate steps to assure that we emerge from the reorganization process with a sound capital structure."
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The company's largest unsecured creditor was HCFA, which it owes $155 million under a settlement agreement reached when IHS bought into the home health business in 1996.

Md. may lose IHS state loan
Baltimore Business Journal February 11, 2000

If Integrated Health Services Inc. misses employment targets stipulated by a $2.5 million state loan, Maryland officials admit they are hogtied when it comes to recouping taxpayer money.

In December 1996, the state shelled out millions to keep the long-term care company headquartered in Baltimore County. The loan turns into a grant if IHS (www.ihs-inc.com) employs 1,000 people at its new Sparks headquarters by Dec. 31, 2000 and maintains that number through 2001.

But the company's Feb. 2 chapter 11 bankruptcy filing calls into question what happens to the taxpayer's investment State officials will have trouble demanding payment because Maryland is fisted as an unsecured creditor - bankruptcy court's equivalent to standing at the end of a school lunch line on pizza day.
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In 1996, IHS stock was a favorite among Wall Street investors. The company was growing and fueling expansion by taking on enormous amounts of debt to acquire more than 1,700 nursing homes nationwide. But changes in Medicare funding, caused by the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, cut the amount of money IHS was being paid and severely hurt the company's ability to pay down its debt. In 1999, IHS had more than $3 billion worth of debt and a stock price that plummeted from the $20 per share range in January to below $1 by the end of the year.

When IHS finished moving to Sparks, the company had 900 employees working at the new headquarters. If IHS does not comply with the loan terms, West said the company will be required to pay back the money borrowed, at five percent interest over 10 years. Because IHS has sought court protection from creditors through its bankruptcy filing, it remains unclear what if anything, the state could do to force IHS to make any such loan payments.

Integrated Health Services is Largest Healthcare Bankruptcy in 2000: Largest Bond Claims Available at BankruptcyData.com
Business Wire March 13, 2000, Monday

BankruptcyData.Com (www.bankruptcydata.com), an Internet site providing in-depth information on major bankruptcies, announced that the lists of largest bond claims and the largest credit facility claims against Integrated Health Services, Inc. are now available on the website.

Debt, Reduced Federal Payments Cripple Nursing Home Industry
The Miami Herald March 14, 2000, Tuesday

Rapid growth, mounting debt and changing federal reimbursement rules are driving the nation's nursing homes to the brink of collapse.

Nursing home executives also say they're being undermined by an explosion of lawsuits in Florida.

Around the Region --- A Dubious Distinction in Debt
The Washington Post March 20, 2000, Monday

Integrated Health Services, the Maryland-based nursing home company currently operating in Chapter 11, is the biggest bankruptcy in the United States so far this year, according to a bankruptcy news service.

BankruptcyData.com said the company's $ 5.39 billion in pre-petition assets make it far and away the biggest company to file for Chapter 11 in 2000.

The news service has a helpful list (which it charges for) of investors who loaned Integrated money. The largest lender is Van Kampen, which lent $ 235.6 million to Integrated. Capital Research & Management is the biggest bond investor, owning $ 375 million.

Integrated Health seeks to lighten debt; Sale of assets among possibilities for Sparks company; Nursing homes
THE BALTIMORE SUN March 25, 2000, Saturday ,FINAL

WILMINGTON, Del. -- Integrated Health Services Inc. hopes to use its bankruptcy reorganization to "restructure the balance sheet through deduction of debt load," Daniel J. Booth, senior vice president of finance, told a creditors' meeting yesterday.
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Among other courses of action being considered, Booth said, are restructuring of leases and other reductions in cost. He said IHS had eliminated "thousands of positions," primarily for contract therapists, over the past year after the federal government reduced Medicare- reimbursement rates.

Nevada nursing homes have nation's highest bankruptcy rate
The Associated Press State & Local Wire March 30, 2000

Just two days before Christmas, 95-year-old Lily Coffman had to pack up her belongings and move to a new nursing home because her old one was closing abruptly.
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Last December's move by Coffman and about 60 fellow nursing home residents is one that's repeating itself around the nation.

More than 1,600 homes have filed for bankruptcy since last fall as they struggle with federal funding cuts, a lack of local or state money, increased insurance costs, tougher quality-care standards and, for some, claims of defrauding government health care programs.
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In Nevada and New Mexico, nearly half the homes owned by big chains and affiliated with the American Health Care Association filed for bankruptcy protection - the highest rates in the nation.
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To head off the crisis, they're joining in a national effort to restore federal Medicare funding that was slashed for a wide range of health care programs when Congress approved the Balanced Budget Act of 1997.

A nationwide television and print campaign was launched last week by the AHCA, which represents nearly two-thirds of the 17,000 nursing homes in the United States.
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Nevada's high rate was due mainly to the early February filing by Integrated Health Services Inc. The Sparks, Md.-based company owns 15 of the 22 Nevada homes now involved in Chapter 11 proceedings. In all, IHS has 400 homes around the nation.

Omega Announces Restructuring Talks With Tenants
Business Wire March 31, 2000, Friday

The Company also reported that Integrated Health Services, Inc. ("Integrated") has ceased paying interest on $55 million in mortgages owed to Omega. Interest payable by Integrated amounts to approximately$5.5 million annually. Omega holds $1.25 million in letters of credit to secure payment performance of the foregoing. Omega continues to negotiate with Integrated with respect to payment of interest for the properties operated by Integrated during the pendency of Integrated's bankruptcy proceeding.

SNH Announces Agreements With Integrated Health Services and Related Matters
Business Wire April 12, 2000, Wednesday

Senior Housing Properties Trust (NYSE:SNH) today announced a conditional agreement with Integrated Health Services, Inc. (NASDQ:IHSV) and a related agreement with HEALTHSOUTH Corporation (NYSE:HRC).

SNH currently leases or first mortgage finances a total of 39 nursing homes to Integrated. The contractual amount of rent and interest due from Integrated to SNH for these leases and mortgages is approximately $ 26.9 million per year. Integrated stopped paying rent and interest on these obligations in January 2000, at which time SNH terminated these leases and accelerated these mortgages. Integrated filed for bankruptcy in February 2000.

The conditional agreement between SNH and Integrated provides as follows:

--The lease for one nursing home in Pennsylvania (140 beds) will be amended - - - - The remaining 37 nursing homes (4,661 beds) - - - - - Integrated's lease and mortgage obligations affecting these properties will be cancelled.
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--As further compensation for the unpaid mortgages and rent, at the closing Integrated will convey nine nursing homes (648 beds) to SNH, eight of which Integrated now owns free of debt and one of which is leased from a municipality.
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--At the closing SNH will commence operations for its own account of 41 properties with 3,901 beds, including 33 of the 37 properties for which leases and mortgages are cancelled and eight of the nine properties which are received from Integrated. The remaining five properties will be leased to Horizon/CMS Corporation, a subsidiary of HEALTHSOUTH Corporation (see below).
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"SNH is pleased to have reached an agreement with Integrated early in its bankruptcy process. SNH believes the best way to preserve values is to free its properties from the uncertainties which arise from a prolonged bankruptcy process.

 

Integrated Health Services Reports Fourth Quarter and Year-End Results
PR Newswire April 14, 2000, Friday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: IHSVQ) today announced revenues and operating results of the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 1999.

Integrated reports large losses for quarter; News follows bankruptcy filing; IHS reports large losses in quarter; Nursing homes
THE BALTIMORE SUN April 15, 2000, Saturday

Integrated Health Services Inc., the nursing home operator with headquarters in Sparks, reported substantial losses yesterday for the quarter that ended March 31 -- hardly a surprise, because it filed for bankruptcy reorganization during the quarter.

COMMENT:- Entrepreneurs are ever ready to capitalise on the misfortune of others. Staff working for IHS have read the signs. They have set up another company to buy up facilities at bargain prices and capitalise on the bankruptcies. Whether they will provide better services for patients is debatable. They don't discuss patients in this health care context. This is business.

Rebuilding from the rubble ; Start-ups seek value in financially ruined, decidedly unglamorous nursing home industry
Modern Healthcare May 1, 2000, Monday

Fran Kirley has impeccable timing. A former executive vice president at Integrated Health Services, Kirley left his job last November, soon after two national nursing home companies filed for bankruptcy protection in the wake of sweeping changes to Medicare payments for skilled nursing. A few months later, Sparks, Md.-based IHS followed suit, citing the same payment squeeze.

But by then, Kirley was hard at work on his next project. In March, he and two other ex-IHS employees founded a nursing home start-up, just in time to make the most of the sectorwide shake-up.

"I think we're in a valley right now in terms of the industry," he says, talking from a mobile phone in rural Indiana, where he's investigating possible acquisitions. "Demand (for buyers) has been greater than we expected."

Kirley says he's talking to several real estate owners and regional operators that want someone to take over the operations of their nursing homes, and quickly.

Triumph Health, which operates out of Kirley's home in Sykesville, Md., doesn't own any nursing homes yet, and hasn't bagged the $25 million in venture capital it needs to get started. But things are moving fast, Kirley says. By mid-June, the financing should be in place and the firm will make a round of acquisitions toward its first-year target of 40 buildings, Kirley says.

From the ashes. Triumph is a recent addition to the small but growing number of start-ups with plans to rebuild from the rubble of the financially ruined nursing home industry.

Ex-IHS execs tap into an ailing industry
Baltimore Business Journal June 16, 2000

Fran Kirley got out of the mega-chain nursing home industry while the getting was good.

Four months before Sparks-based Integrated Health Services filed for bankruptcy protection, the former IHS executive vice president jumped off the sinking ship and headed for what he and other analysts believe is the industry's higher ground - the management business.

With nothing more than the money they had in their pockets, Kirley and two other ex-IHS employees - Bretton Bolt and Mariann Smith - formed Triumph Health in February. They intend to become one of a growing number of small companies that are selling their management expertise to cashstrapped homes that have either been dropped by the larger chains or just need someone to run their smaller operations.

"Look at what's going on; Seven of the top 10 nursing home chains are in bankruptcy," said Kirley, the president of Sykesville-based Triumph. '"There's a tremendous opportunity to get into the market. The major chains will dispose of some of their assets, and the small chains will want to get out of the management business."

Stephen Allen saw the same opportunity present itself just a few months earlier. Allen, who has 21 years of nursing home experience, started Monkton-based Xavier Health Care Services Inc. in March 1999 with the same business plan as Kirley's Triumph.

Industry analysts say an exodus of nursing home management and labor expertise has created a void tailor-made for companies like Triumph and Xavier (www.xavierhealthcare.com) to do their best job of rebuilding. The challenge for those companies, experts say, does not have as much to do with piecing together financial remains as it does finding the money that lies in the rubble of the nursing home industry.

Kirley, Allen and their associates may not have to look any further than smalltown America for such rewards. Some nursing home experts say the small nursing home groups that have not been as damaged by the sweeping changes in Medicare payments for skilled-nursing facilities may be diamonds in the rough.

Changes in the Medicare reimbursement rate and the creation of the prospective payment system for skilled nursing facilities that took effect July 1998 turned once-profitable mega-chains like Sparksbased Integrated Health Services into the laughing stock of Wall Street. One study found that the value of the nursing home industry dropped 83 percent - from $13.4 billion to $2.3 billion - between March 1998 and December 1999.

"The mom-and-pop facilities are an interesting deal right now," said Dr. Scott Rifkin, the founder of Americas Doctor.com Internet site and a former employee of Lorien Health System, a nursing home group in Ellicott City. "The small groups, and even some smaller chains of like 10 to 15 homes, didn't feel the hit like the larger chains - the IHSs and ManorCares of the world."

Integrated Health Services Reports First Quarter
PR Newswire May 16, 2000, Tuesday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: IHSVQ) today announced revenues and operating results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2000.

IHS RESURFACES IN SIZE
Loan Market Week June 12, 2000

Integrated Health Services' bank debt reappeared on the secondary market scene last week, with a $ 20 million chunk of the paper trading down. The loan traded around 30-31, with dealers noting that this was a significant drop in price from levels in the 40s, where it had traded over a month ago.
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One dealer said an investor must have been seeking to lessen his exposure to this credit, noting that a few companies are holding over $ 100 million of IHS debt.

SNH Announces Approval of its Agreements with Mariner and Integrated
Business Wire July 13, 2000, Thursday

Senior Housing Properties Trust (NYSE:SNH) today announced that its agreements with Mariner Post-Acute Networks, Inc. (OTC:MPANE) and Integrated Health Services, Inc. (OTC:IHSV) were approved by the Bankruptcy Courts supervising the Chapter 11 proceedings by Mariner and Integrated.
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The previously announced settlement with Integrated provides as follows:
  • SNH had leased or provided first mortgage financing to Integrated for 39 nursing homes.
  • The lease for one nursing home in Pennsylvania (140 beds) is amended to provide a new ten-year term at $100,000 per month ($1.2 million per year) plus annual escalations. As amended, this lease has been assumed by Integrated as a priority expense in its bankruptcy effective January 1, 2000.
  • SNH's mortgage investment secured by one nursing home in Louisiana (118 beds) is cancelled and Integrated will continue to own and operate that property.
  • Integrated's lease and mortgage obligations to SNH for the remaining 37 nursing homes are relinquished by Integrated.
  • In addition to rent for the Pennsylvania property described above, Integrated has paid SNH a total of approximately $3 million for its use and occupation of the SNH leased and mortgaged properties and other claims arising from the date of the Integrated bankruptcy filing on February 2, 2000 until June 30, 2000.
  • As further compensation for the unpaid mortgage and rent Integrated will convey nine nursing homes (648 beds) to SNH.
  • SNH will operate for its own account 41 proprieties with 3,901 beds including 33 of the 37 properties for which leases and mortgages are cancelled and eight of the nine properties received from Integrated.
  • Leases for five properties formerly operated by Integrated have been assumed by HEALTHSOUTH (NYSE: HRC).

Bigger isn't better; Our first Post-Acute-Care Survey finds that larger firms are faring worst in turbulent industry
Modern Healthcare July 24, 2000, Monday

  • If the first are to be last and the meek are to inherit the earth, the post-acute-care industry may be ahead of its time.
  • Among respondents to MODERN HEALTHCARE's first Post-Acute-Care Survey--an unscientific sample of 105 providers of skilled-nursing and assisted-living care, continuing-care retirement communities, home healthcare, long-term acute care, outpatient services and rehabilitation therapy--the largest companies are faring the worst.
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    Of 63 respondents providing financial data for both years, the biggest companies were the least likely to post year-to-year improvements in net income. They were also the most likely to report a bottom-line loss.
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    Integrated Health Services, Sparks, Md., and Sun Healthcare Group, Albuquerque, both long-term-care chains that are reorganizing under bankruptcy protection, posted the biggest net losses in 1999, with a combined $3.3 billion in red ink between them.
  • Even the few publicly traded nursing home chains that experts agree aren't in danger of bankruptcy lost large sums.
    ----------------------------
    By contrast, 17 of the 21 respondents in the middle group made money in 1999, and just over half improved their earnings from 1998.
  • The smallest 21 respondents performed similarly to the largest 21, with eight reporting a positive bottom line and five reporting better results in 1999 than in 1998.
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    For many skilled-nursing and assisted-living companies, aggressive growth in the mid- to late 1990s ultimately set them back. Bigger, in the end, wasn't better.
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    Medium-size companies, such as Chicago-based Alden Management Services, tend to fare better under the new system because they never created a high-cost system of care the way their bigger competitors did. They also didn't take on debt to support massive growth, debt that could no longer be supported once payments fell below expected levels.

State to increase Medicaid benefits
Las Vegas Review-Journal (Las Vegas, NV) July 26, 2000

CARSON CITY _ The amount of money the state pays for Medicaid recipients in long-term care will be increased to avert a potential crisis of bankrupted nursing homes and homeless senior citizens, Gov. Kenny Guinn announced Tuesday.
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There is a real concern about the possible closure of nursing homes and the loss of long-term care beds, Guinn said. Two companies operating in Nevada, including one that has 34 percent of the total nursing home beds, are in bankruptcy, he said.

The larger company, Integrated Health Services Inc., is seeking to reorganize, Guinn said. The increase in the reimbursement rate should help, he said.

Bankruptcy filing affects municipal utility
The Associated Press State & Local Wire August 14, 2000, Monday, BC cycle

City-owned utilities in Bloomfield and Farmington say a company that owns nursing homes in the two communities and recently filed for protection from creditors under the federal Bankruptcy Code owes them about $17,000.

Integrated Health Services, which owns Bloomfield Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, has filed for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.

Hearing on objections to IHS' golden parachute for Elkins is postponed 3 parties contesting $50 million package Health services
THE BALTIMORE SUN August 24, 2000, Thursday ,FINAL

The U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del., has delayed a hearing on objections to the $50 million-plus golden parachute package proposed for Dr. Robert N. Elkins, outgoing chairman and chief executive officer of the now-bankrupt Integrated Health Services Inc.

Three parties have filed objections to the package, and the court, which is handling IHS' Chapter 11 bankruptcy, was to hear from them in court today. But lawyers familiar with the case said the IHS creditors committee needs more time to review the objections.

IHS receives court permission for sale of property in Sparks Bankrupt provider of health care wants to sell 80 of 150 acres
THE BALTIMORE SUN October 12, 2000, Thursday

Integrated Health Services Inc., the bankrupt health care provider, has received court permission to hire a broker and sell more than half of its corporate campus in Sparks.
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IHS sought the U.S. Bankruptcy Court's permission to hire TriAlliance Commercial Real Estate Services LLC of Towson to market the property, which the health care provider bought in 1997 for $6.2 million. It plans to sell 80 of its 150 acres, 54 of which can be developed. No buildings are for sale. The asking price is about $13.5 million, according to the broker.
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The headquarters buildings were partially funded by the state, which deemed IHS a major employer worthy of public aid to expand. In exchange for $2.5 million from the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development, IHS had to agree to a $150 million capital investment and new jobs. It was expected to maintain employment of 685 jobs, add 315 jobs by the end of this year, and maintain 1,000 jobs through next year, or pay the money back with interest.

Integrated Health, U.S. spar on Elkins accord; Bankruptcy Court is told $50 million is, isn't reasonable
The Baltimore Sun December 9, 2000 Saturday

WILMINGTON, Del. - Lawyers for bankrupt Integrated Health Services Inc. and for the creditors' committee told a judge yesterday that a $50 million-plus separation agreement with Dr. Robert N. Elkins, the company's founder and chief executive, was a compromise that would help the company move forward.

The deal represented "the lowest range of reasonableness," Arthur Steinberg, a New York attorney representing Sparks-based IHS, said in U.S. Bankruptcy Court here.

But a Justice Department attorney, James G. Bruen Jr., said terms were excessive and that the company had offered "no reasons for the settlement agreement but a number of rationalizations."

Elkins founded IHS in 1986 and built it into a Fortune 500 company. When the federal government cut Medicare payment levels in 1998, the company, like several other large nursing home chains, began to lose money. It filed for bankruptcy reorganization in February.

In July, the company negotiated the separation agreement with Elkins, which includes forgiveness of $40 million in loans, a tax payment of $18.9 million to cover that amount, and $1,494,000 in cash. If the court approves, Elkins will leave the company and Joseph A. Bondi, a turnaround specialist already on board as "chief restructuring officer," would officially take over.

Steinberg argued that Elkins' loan agreements call for them to be canceled anyway and, since Elkins did not have the money to pay the taxes on the value of the loan forgiveness, the company would be liable for that amount. He said the only real additional cost to the company was the $1,494,000 payment.

Without a settlement agreement, Steinberg said, the company could become involved in costly litigation with Elkins over potential claims for up to $8.5 million in severance pay and $26 million from a "supplemental executive retirement plan" - claims that Elkins would forgo as part of the agreement.

Bondi testified, "I view this as being a $1.5 million issue, and I think the cost of litigating with Dr. Elkins would be more than $1.5 million."

Glenn B. Rice, an attorney for the creditors' committee, said that while the Sparks, Md.-based Integrated Heal agreement meant the company couldn't pursue Elkins to recover the taxes, "he claims he doesn't have the assets (to pay the taxes), and even if he does, we're not going to find them."

Bruen, however, argued, "The company is paying $20.5 million, and it's not clear what the company is getting in return."

He said Elkins' consent, as part of the agreement, to offer IHS a $ 1 option for his share in a company called Monarch LLC, which owns 33 nursing homes IHS operates, was of uncertain worth.

The value of the Monarch option, he said, "is probably better than the value of a Powerball ticket."

COMMENT:- Elkins has ruined the company by his lack of insight and his ineptitude. He has led the company into fraud and extensive allegations of substandard care. Note that the industry still consider him to be an "an industry visionary". What hope when people think like this!

Nursing home CEO gets departure deal; Elkins led IHS chain to boom, bankruptcy
The Baltimore Sun January 13, 2001

Dr. Robert N. Elkins, who built Integrated Health Services Inc. into a Fortune 500 company, only to see it spiral into bankruptcy last year, will leave the company in the next few days after court approval of a severance package worth nearly $55 million.

Elkins has led the nursing home chain, which has its headquarters in Sparks, since he started it in 1986, but his aggressive acquisition strategy also led to problems. And when the federal government cut Medicare reimbursements to nursing homes in 1998, IHS was unable to meet its debt payments.
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Under the agreement, IHS will pay Elkins $1.494 million, will forgive $34.5 million that the company lent Elkins to buy now-nearly-worthless IHS stock, and will pay $18.9 million in taxes resulting from the loan forgiveness. Elkins will perform 100 hours of consulting work over the next year.

Such a package for a CEO who took his company into bankruptcy "looks excessive, but it also looks inevitable," said Kevin Murphy, professor of finance at the University of Southern California and a consultant on executive compensation.

"Even though the numbers are staggering, you have to distinguish this from a case where you write a $50 million check and say, 'Thank you for destroying our company.'"
--------------------------------------------
Elkins was "an industry visionary" in adding staff and equipment to treat "subacute" patients - those who are well enough to be discharged from a hospital but still too sick to go home, said Stephen B. Monroe, editor of Senior Care Investor, an industry newsletter.

"He wasn't the inventor of it, but he took advantage of a market opportunity and saw that as the future of the industry," he said.
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Most objections to the deal were dropped, but the U.S. Department of Justice continued its opposition, arguing at a hearing last month in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del., that the settlement was unreasonable. The federal government has potential claims against IHS, including a whistle-blower lawsuit charging Medicare fraud. The Justice Department joined the fraud case last month.
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He said IHS would "do everything we can to emerge from bankruptcy reorganization as soon as possible," but he could not offer a specific timetable.

Integrated Health Services Announces New CEO
PR Newswire January 15, 2001, Monday

Integrated Health Services, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: IHSVQ) today announced that Joseph A. Bondi of the turnaround consulting firm of Alvarez & Marsal, Inc., has been named as the Chief Executive Officer of the Company. Mr. Bondi had been serving as the Chief Restructuring Officer of the Company since July 27, 2000 pending approval by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware of an agreement between Robert N. Elkins and IHS pursuant to which Dr. Elkins would step aside as CEO of IHS.

IHS reaches $55 million settlement with founder
Modern Healthcare January 22, 2001, Monday

Bankrupt nursing home provider Integrated Health Services, Sparks, Md., last week reached a nearly $55 million settlement with one of its founders, Robert Elkins, M.D., sealing Elkins' agreement to leave the company and make way for new leadership.

COMMENT:- The traditional practice of dealing with financial pressures by cutting costs has run the companies into serious problems. Citizens already angry at the neglect of their parents in nursing homes focussing on profitable therapies rather than care have taken to the courts particularly in Florida, Texas and California. IHS is one of these and is being held accountable, particularly in Florida where juries award massive penalties as a deterrent. Insurance premiums are rising and insurers are refusing to insure homes which provide poor care. A series of reviews have shown how understaffing, deskilling and destruction of morale in corporate facilities has compromised care. It is difficult to cut costs further.

The response of the corporations to these pressures is not to improve care but to go to the politicians who receive their donations and ask the politicians to change the law to protect the chains from patients and their lawyers. Despite its financial plight IHS is one of those funding this. Citizens and their lawyers are meeting this head on.

ELDERLY CARE BATTLE SEES CASH INFUSION; TRIAL LAWYERS AND THE NURSING-HOME INDUSTRY ARE POURING MONEY INTO POLITICAL RACES FOR NEXT YEAR'S LEGISLATURE.
THE ORLANDO SENTINEL October 29,

There's big money involved in the upcoming legislative session, when Florida lawmakers have vowed they will tackle the "long-term care crisis."

So it's not surprising the two groups with the most to lose -- trial lawyers and the nursing-home industry -- already are preparing for the fight as they fine-tune arguments and give money to candidates.
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Wilkes said he is putting as much as $1 million of his own money into the political process and pet projects related to nursing-home reform.

Two political action committees with an interest in nursing-home legislation, the Florida Lawyers Action Group Trust and the Florida Health Care Association, have spent $1.7 million on campaigns since the start of 1999.

At the same time, corporate nursing-home chains are funneling cash into campaigns, as well as through Florida Health Care's political action committee. Seven of the state's largest for-profit care providers have spent a total of $181,654 in the 2000 election cycle.

Yet three of these seven -- Integrated Health Services, Mariner and Vencor -- have filed for bankruptcy during this same period-- - -
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"But people need to realize it's just a cost of doing business and one that isn't reimbursed by Medicaid," he (Ed Towey, spokesman for the Florida Health Care Association) said.
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As it stands now, the Florida Lawyers Action Group Trust, which routinely solicits donations from the state's most successful attorneys, has spent about $1.6 million. The money went to pay for everything from consultants to opinion polls to printing costs; and $57,381 went directly to political parties or individual candidates.

Representing the for-profit nursing-home industry, the health-care association's Florida Health Care Political Action Committee has spent about $91,900, according to state reports, including $76,350 in direct campaign contributions.

IHS says it's still bleeding
Baltimore Business Journal April 27, 2001

Integrated Health Services Inc., the Sparks nursing home chain struggling to emerge from bankruptcy, lost $490 million last year - bringing its total losses over the past four years to about $2.8 billion.
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In Integrated Health's April 2 filing, company officials blame the heavy losses on Medicare charges and the costs of reorganizing the company and restructuring its debt.
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"The bottom line is they're losing money and nobody's got a good solution to stop the bleeding," said Peter A- Chapman, editor of Trenton, N.J.-based Bankruptcy Creditors' Service Inc. (www.bankrupt .com). "Because of their size, it's still a mess and it's going to be a mess for awhile. They're probably sitting down with the government right now."

Last year, the federal government began investigating possible violations of the federal False Claims Act by Integrated Health, according to SEC documents. The company made a $39.5 million provision for settlement of the government claims, but Integrated Health warned in its 1999 annual report that the government's review had not been completed and that any final settlement could differ significantly.
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If Integrated Health emerges from bankruptcy, it will not resemble the nursing home giant that once owned or operated more than 350 facilities throughout the country and was a favorite on Wall Street Since filing for bankruptcy protection, the company has terminated numerous contracts, canceled shares of stock and sold other noncore operations.

Included among the company's recent transactions are:

* The termination of lease agreements for at least 30 longterm care facilities;
* Terminated management contracts for at least 18 facilities;
* Cancelled 715,296 shares of stock that had been issued to former employees;
* The separation of RoTech Medical Corp. - a subsidiary from Integrated Health.

When Integrated Health filed for bankruptcy last year, it had about $5 billion in liabilities and about $5.39 billion in assets.

Earlier this year, Integrated Health reached a nearly $55 million settlement with co-founder Robert Elkins.

C. Taylor Pickett Named Chief Executive Officer of Omega Healthcare
Business Wire June 11, 2001, Monday

Prior to joining Omega, Pickett served as the Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Integrated Health Services, Inc. (IHS), a public company specializing in post-acute healthcare services. He also served as Executive Vice President of mergers and acquisitions of IHS. As Chief Financial Officer, Pickett primarily focused on the restructuring and de-leveraging of IHS.

Comment August 2003:- As one looks at the bankruptcy below it seems that the larger IHS and smaller Tans Healthcare are simply merging with the same staff and hopefully new directors. Will the culture change? Everyone loses their money, Trans Health puts up some money and then it is back to business as usual with the emphasis once again on growth rather than care.

180 IHS nursing homes would be taken over by Trans Healthcare Inc.
The Baltimore Sun December 4, 2002

Trans Healthcare Inc., a growing nursing home operator, has signed a deal to buy Integrated Health Services Inc. of Sparks in a transaction that would close the book on a local company that grew in a few years into an industry giant, then plunged even more rapidly into bankruptcy.

Trans Healthcare, which operates 94 nursing homes, would triple in size if a bankruptcy court approves the deal.

It would take over operation of about 180 IHS homes in the deal, and would move its headquarters from Camp Hill, Pa., to the IHS campus in northern Baltimore County.

"Our plan is to continue to grow the business out of the Maryland office," said Anthony Misitano, chief executive officer of Trans Healthcare. "Our plan is to maintain the current work force."
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A turnaround specialist, Joseph A. Bondi, was brought in to manage the reorganization. Yesterday, IHS spokesman Weiden would say only that "a deal is in the works."
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IHS has been in bankruptcy reorganization for nearly three years. Stephen Monroe, editor of the trade publication SeniorCare Investor, said "a lot of people looked at it" as IHS searched for a buyer, "but very few wanted to do something this big," and most potential buyers only wanted small pieces of the business.

 

Post-acute pain; Modern Healthcare survey shows mixed results for providers in '02, with end of Medicare add-on payments among the challenges Modern Healthcare May 5, 2003

IHS-which has been operating under Chapter 11 protection since 2000, was acquired by Abe Briarwood Corp., New York, to be operated by Camp Hill, Pa.-based Trans Healthcare - - .

Bankers lose big in IHS restructuring
Daily Deal (New York, NY) May 9, 2003

A Delaware judge approved a reorganization plan for Integrated Health Services Inc. that gives bankers 6 to 8 cents on the dollar.

Judge Mary Walrath - - approved the plan Wednesday, May 7, as the company scrambles to transfer operations through a stock sale by July, - - . Walrath also confirmed the $105 million auction sale of the Sparks, Md., healthcare provider's two remaining units to Abe Briarwood Corp., he said.

After 39 months in bankruptcy, Integrated hopes to close the sale of its IHS Long Term Care Inc. and IHS Therapy Care Inc. units by July 1.
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Integrated's Citibank-led bank group is slated to recover about $85 million on its $1.3 billion claim. This is in addition to a 40% recovery for the lenders on their a $1 billion loan to Integrated's affiliate, Rotech Medical Corp.

Orlando, Fla.-based Rotech, a maker of respiratory products and durable hospital equipment, spun itself off from Integrated and filed separately for Chapter 11 in Delaware. Rotech emerged from Chapter 11 in March 2002.

Before this, Rotech obtained a $575 million exit financing facility led by Goldman, Sachs & Co. and UBS Warburg and then turned over about $500 million of this to help Integrated pay off it's bank debt.
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Senior unsecured bondholders are scheduled to recover about $26 million, or about 2.5% to 3%, while unsecured creditors are projected to recover about 3 cents on the dollar, Steinberg said. Holders of convertible notes and shareholders will be wiped out, he said.
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Integrated Healthcare owned or operated more than 1,700 facilities in 47 states when it and 437 affiliates filed Feb. 2, 2000.

Trans Healthcare, Inc. to Operate Integrated Health Services' Long Term Care Facilities
PR Newswire May 12, 2003

Briarwood is expected to complete this purchase during the next 90 days. To help ensure effective operations during this transition period, Anthony Misitano, Chairman and CEO of THI, has agreed to serve as an interim management consultant to IHS until the sale process is finalized and THI assumes operational control.

"We are extremely pleased to begin working more closely with IHS in preparation for the formal integration of the two companies," said Mr. Misitano. "We have been working towards this eventuality for some time and remain excited about the combined strengths of the companies."

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