Three insights:
1. The acquisition marks Osceola Capital’s entrance into healthcare.
2. Osceola Capital views payer contracting for small and medium healthcare providers as a “massively underserved segment” with major expansion potential, Vice President Erik Sewell said in a press release.
3. Armando Cardoso will lead Healthcents as CEO. He was previously responsible for guiding payer strategy and contracting as national head of managed care analytics for St. Louis-based Ascension.
“I’m thrilled to join Healthcents because we can make best practices accessible — they don’t need to be reserved for only the largest or best-funded industry stakeholders,” Mr. Cardoso said. “Hiring skilled, full-time managed care contracting talent is simply out of reach for most. Healthcents offers a valuable alternative to small and medium healthcare providers who need to strengthen and maintain their payer relationships.”
More articles on surgery centers:
Alignment, standardization and sole-source partnership — How Mercy brought the Quadruple Aim to orthopedics
Orthopedic surgeon salary, hospital employment on the rise: 3 statistics
5 expert insights on outpatient joint replacements in 2019
At the Becker's 23rd Annual Spine, Orthopedic and Pain Management-Driven ASC + The Future of Spine Conference, taking place June 18–20 in Chicago, spine surgeons, orthopedic leaders and ASC executives will come together to explore minimally invasive techniques, ASC growth strategies and innovations shaping the future of outpatient spine care. Apply for complimentary registration now.
