NYC Health + Hospitals to Acquire Maimonides in $2.2B Safety Net Overhaul from HIT Fred Pennic

NYC Health + Hospitals to Acquire Maimonides in $2.2B Safety Net Overhaul

What You Should Know: 

– New York City’s public health system, NYC Health + Hospitals (NYC H+H), has officially announced its plan to acquire Maimonides Health, a move fueled by a $2.2B state grant designed to stabilize Brooklyn’s crumbling safety net. 

– This merger will allow Maimonides to exit financial instability by accessing higher Medicaid reimbursement rates reserved for public entities and migrating to a unified Epic electronic health record (EHR) to fix fragmented care coordination.

Maimonides Joins NYC Health + Hospitals to Fortify Brooklyn’s Safety Net

For years, Maimonides Health has teetered on the edge of a financial precipice, threatened by federal cuts and the high cost of maintaining its specialized independent teaching status. This merger is not a standard corporate consolidation; it is a state-funded rescue mission.

The $2.2B cash infusion from Governor Hochul’s Health Care Safety Net Transformation Program is the largest “check” ever written to prevent a Brooklyn healthcare collapse. While the marketing focuses on “shared missions,” the real story for the C-Suite is the Medicaid rate arbitrage. By folding Maimonides into NYC H+H, the system suddenly qualifies for significantly higher public-sector reimbursement rates—literally turning a money-losing asset into a sustainable one overnight.


The Digital Backbone: Finally, a Unified Epic EHR

One of the most significant hurdles for independent safety-net hospitals is the staggering cost of modern health IT. Under the new agreement:

  • The Epic Migration: Maimonides will adopt NYC H+H’s unified Epic EHR platform, replacing what has been a disjointed system across its 80+ community sites.
  • Revenue Cycle Optimization: The switch to Epic isn’t just about clinical notes; it’s about revenue collection. NYC H+H has already demonstrated this success, increasing direct patient care revenue to $5.7B in FY 2025 through better data capture.
  • Patient Interoperability: Patients will finally have a single digital portal to access records and contact care teams across the entire Brooklyn public network.

The “Katz Effect”: Financial Transformation at Scale

Critics often dismiss public systems as inefficient, but the numbers under President and CEO Dr. Mitchell Katz tell a different story. Since 2017, the system has:

  1. Grown Primary Care: Added 43,000 new primary care patients since 2018, reaching 459,000 in FY 2025.
  2. Increased Revenue: Boosted direct patient revenue by $2.5B since FY 2019.
  3. Stabilized Nursing: Achieved a turnover rate (7.3%) that is less than half the national average of 16.4%.

The partnership is expected to be legally finalized before April 1, 2026.

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