4 ASC closures in 2025

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Here are four ASC closures Becker’s has reported on in 2025:

1. The Urology Center of Colorado, based in Denver, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy Feb. 13 in the wake of a $1 million lawsuit from an Iowa-based data security company. The center, known as TUCC, abruptly closed last summer as the first step in the bankruptcy process. One patient reportedly wrote in a Yelp review that their appointment was “cancelled without warning.” An undated message on TUCC’s website reads:

“After 18 years of dedicated service to the Denver community, we are announcing the closure of The Urology Surgery Center of Colorado. It has truly been a privilege to care for you and your families during this time.”

According to the BusinessDen, just two weeks before filing for bankruptcy TUCC and its former CEO John Tillett, MD, were sued by Cedar Rapids, Iowa-based Ark Data Centers, a data security company that stored TUCC’s data. The lawsuit seeks $1 million in unpaid bills and accuses Dr. Tillet and the company of perjury and fraud, according to the report.

2. Tenants of a three-story medical office building in Dorchester, Mass., have been ordered to vacate by May. The medical office building is located on the campus of Carney Hospital, which shut down abruptly following a bankruptcy filing by its parent company Dallas-based Steward Health Care. The building, known locally as Seton Medical Building, will officially shutter in May and currently houses family medicine, podiatry, surgery, cardiology and other practices.

3. Sturm Cosmetic Surgery, an ASC in Ames, Iowa, has closed for unknown reasons. A notice pinned to the front door of the center  said that the center is no longer accepting patients. All upcoming surgical appointments have also been canceled. The center’s website is no longer active and has been scrubbed of all information. 

4. Sacramento-based Sutter Health will close its Sutter Amador Surgery Center in Jackson, Calif. The center, which provides non-emergency procedures such as endoscopies, cataract surgeries and pain management injections, will be transitioned to Sutter Amador Hospital.

In an open letter to the community, Sutter Amador Hospital CEO Michael Cureton, Sutter Amador Surgery Center Ambulatory Services Administrator Branden Nelson, and the center’s Executive of Operations Johnny Russell said the move will allow the organization to “align resources with areas of growing need” and that they are working with physicians to create a “more seamless and efficient process for patient care.”

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