1The headline thesis
2What our own review changed
A draft was put through three adversarial reviews — market realism, regulatory feasibility, financial realism — before anything was recommended. The strategy's spine survived; three optimistic claims did not. This is what separates analysis from a brochure.
3Sizing the recapture prize — and what's actually winnable
In RCH's core draw area (Redlands · Yucaipa · Mentone · Calimesa, 15,513 inpatient discharges) RCH keeps just 36.8%. Lifting share moves the operating line — but most of the leak is structurally locked.
The recapture scenarios
| Target core share | Disch. | Incr. | Net IP rev* |
|---|---|---|---|
| 36.8% (today) | 5,712 | — | — |
| 42% | 6,515 | +803 | +$14.0M |
| 46% | 7,136 | +1,424 | +$24.8M |
| 50% | 7,756 | +2,044 | +$35.7M |
*@ ~$17,448 net IP rev/discharge (HCAI). Gross planning estimate; the review caps the board target at 40–42% and reports it in contribution margin (~+$2–5.5M).
But only ~half the leak is winnable
| Leakage bucket | Disch. | Recapturable? |
|---|---|---|
| Kaiser closed-network | ~1,661 | No |
| Tertiary / peds / trauma → LLU & Arrowhead | ~3,032 | No |
| Community-acuity (residual) | ~5,108 | Yes |
The structurally recapturable pool implies a realistic share ceiling near 70%, not 100% — worth ~$89M at full capture, but no standalone community hospital wins all of it.
4Resident lives vs. daytime-worker lives
A covered-lives count built on employer location (who works at a Redlands employer) is not the same market as residence (who lives in the service area) — and network efficiency is governed by where people live. The Census commuting data shows the two populations are largely different people in different places.
Three populations, two lines of business
| Segment | Who | RCH network efficient? | The right play |
|---|---|---|---|
| Resident lives | Live in the service area (incl. the bedroom-community ring) | Yes | Own the relationship: CIN, primary care, value-based/ACO, a provider-sponsored plan |
| Daytime-worker lives | Work in Redlands, live elsewhere (~33,000) | No | Serve episodically, payer-agnostic: occ-health, near-site employer clinics, urgent care, imaging, ED, ASC, ortho/spine COE, direct-to-employer bundles |
| Out-commuters | Live in Redlands, work elsewhere (~24,900, mostly <15 min away) | Yes | Capture as residents: stay broadly contracted (open PPO); prime targets for the CIN & a resident plan — invisible to an employer count |
5Porter's Five Forces — where RCH is boxed in
| Force | Rating | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Supplier power (physicians) | High | Binding constraint #1. Optum/Beaver — the largest medical group — is owned by UnitedHealth (a payer) and gatekeeps referrals; CPOM bars RCH from out-employing it |
| Rivalry | High | Binding constraint #2. LLU (academic, Level I trauma, peds) takes ~28% of the core leak; Kaiser closed-network ~11%; Dignity & Arrowhead in the broader ring |
| Buyer power | Med-High | Commercial payers, self-funded employers, Medi-Cal MCOs (IEHP/Molina), price transparency |
| Substitutes | Med-High | Telehealth, urgent care, ASCs vs. HOPD, home-based care, direct primary care |
| New entrants | Medium | Kaiser expansion, ASC proliferation, retail/CVS/Amazon/Optum clinics, FQHC growth (Neighborhood Healthcare-Beaumont) |
6SWOT → TOWS
TOWS forces internal strengths/weaknesses to be matched against external opportunities/threats — producing four action postures, not a static list.
| Opportunities — ~5,100 recapturable discharges; ~320 independent PCPs; ~22,000 capturable lives; Pass whitespace; CalAIM/VBC tailwinds; ambulatory migration | Threats — Optum gatekeeper + CPOM; LLU encroachment; -6%/yr inpatient decay; Kaiser lock; AB1415/OHCA clock; FQHC/retail entrants; 2030 seismic capex | |
|---|---|---|
| Strengths — ED front door; ortho/spine; 120-yr brand + #3 employer; 56.6% occupancy headroom; SB351 carve-out | SO — Offensive. Convert ED dominance into retained admissions; build the CIN nucleus around Yucaipa by signing CAMG + RYMG first; weaponize SB351 as a "stay independent, stay local" recruiting asset; fund ASC/RPM from outpatient strength. | ST — Defensive. Aggregate the ~320 independents now to neutralize Optum before the pool is absorbed; compete on focused differentiation (elective ortho/spine, access), conceding trauma/peds to LLU via affiliation; own the ASC channel. |
| Weaknesses — operating loss + thin cushion; inpatient/OB decline; CMS 2-star vs. 4-star marketed + stroke mortality; no owned PCP base; sub-scale | WO — Improvement. Fix the quality-credibility gap as Phase 0 before any negotiation; sequence the build cash-generative (harvest ortho/ambulatory first, defer Knox-Keene); open with zero-license direct-to-employer contracts. | WT — Survival. Don't chase the full 63% leak — anchor to the ~52% recapturable pool at a 40–46% band; secure external capital before the window closes; adopt a "lowest-compliant-rung" deal doctrine under SB351/AB1415. |
The SO quadrant is where Redlands Health wins and should command the first capital; the WO quadrant (quality fix) is the gating prerequisite; the ST quadrant (the CIN) resolves the strategy's central tension.
7Three growth horizons
Recommended directional strategy (Ginter): expansion via forward vertical integration + related diversification + market development, with a disciplined contraction call on sub-scale acute lines. Entry vehicle: cooperation before purchase. Competitive posture: focused differentiation.
| Horizon | Ginter strategy / vehicle | The core move | Quantified prize |
|---|---|---|---|
| H1 · Stop the Leak 0–2 yrs · committed | Penetration + light forward integration · Cooperation (CIN + MSO) | Form the CIN (CAMG, RYMG, Arrowhead Ortho, IPAs); convert the ED moat into admissions; rung-1 direct-to-employer (ESRI, RUSD, RCH's own plan) | 36.8% → 42% core share ≈ +$2–5.5M contribution (≈ +$14M gross); transfer-prevention |
| H2 · Build the System 2–5 yrs · conditional | Full forward integration + diversification + market development · Cooperation → JV | Friendly-PC + MSO primary-care base; shared-savings; San Gorgonio Pass expansion; hospital-at-home + RPM for the high-cost tier | 46–50% share band ≈ +$25–36M; high-cost ~5–6% drive ~50% of spend |
| H3 · Own the Model 5–10 yrs · option only | Related diversification (provider-sponsored plan) · Knox-Keene + §1206(l) | Restricted → full Knox-Keene plan; §1206(l) foundation; regional consolidation — only after the CIN demonstrably manages cost | 1,405 → ~22,000 capturable lives (15×); CIN ceiling ~700,000 |
8Financial & value-creation case
An illustrative value bridge — annual contribution to operating income. Planning estimates, not actuarial. The cheapest rung (the no-license CIN) carries the most value, which is what makes the program financeable.
| Value-bridge step | Δ Operating |
|---|---|
| FY2024 operating result (start) | -$8.6M |
| + Inpatient recapture to 46% core share | +$8.7M |
| + Ambulatory / ASC line (2,000 cases) | +$3.1M |
| + CIN shared savings (~115k lives, mid) | +$15.0M |
| + Owned plan, Year 1 (7k lives) | +$2.8M |
| − CIN / care-management overhead | -$8 to 12M |
| Steady-state operating swing | +$9 to +$13M |
Conservative on inpatient (46%, not 50%); biggest contribution rests on the no-license CIN rung. See the editable Pro Forma →
Investment & payback
- $60–110M phased: CIN/MSO + care-mgmt IT $8–15M (Yr 0–1); aligned PC / §1206(l) $20–40M (Yr 1–4); ASC capex $15–25M (Yr 1–3); Knox-Keene reserves $15–30M (deferred to rung 4); working capital / J-curve $10–20M.
- Self-funding by sequence: the no-license CIN rung earns ~$10.6–19.8M/yr at ~2–3 yr payback on its slice; ED-to-IP recapture lands against an existing fixed-cost base at 56.6% occupancy. Blended payback ~4–6 yrs.
9Recommendations & first 90 days
Top recommendations
- Green-light Horizon 1 only as a committed program; classify H2/H3 as conditional options.
- Phase 0 quality fix = hard stop/go gate: re-enter Leapfrog, remediate stroke mortality, reconcile the 2-star-live vs. 4-star-marketed claim. No term sheet is signed until underway.
- External capital is a precondition: a risk-enablement JV / managed-services partner (turnkey CIN/MSO platform) + a philanthropic campaign on the $58M community-benefit story.
- Re-underwrite recapture: one denominator, cap at 40–42%, report contribution margin, don't stack the ED lever.
- Fund organizational readiness as line items: named CEO sponsor + guiding coalition (Kotter), VP Population Health, CIN executive director; cap concurrent initiatives per 18-month window.
- Treat CAMG & RYMG as binary risks; model first-wave lives without RYMG. Win physicians on deliverable economics, not SB351 alone.
First 90 days
- Board + incoming CEO adopt the Horizon-1-only mandate; name the sponsor and coalition.
- Launch Phase 0 quality remediation; correct the public star-rating claim within 30 days.
- Commission a true-liquidity re-underwrite (audited unrestricted days-cash, covenants, 2030 seismic).
- Open talks with 2–3 risk-enablement/MSO partners; frame the philanthropic campaign.
- Pull ED-to-IP case-mix/DRG data to separate community-acuity from tertiary before booking any recapture.
- Counsel-led exploratory talks with CAMG, RYMG, Arrowhead Ortho, the IPAs — with a no-RYMG fallback model.
- Stand up rung-1 direct-to-employer outreach (ESRI, RUSD); convert RCH's 1,405-life plan into the CIN proof-of-concept.
- Bring an explicit OB defend-or-harvest decision memo to the board.
10The risks that can kill it
| Risk | Mitigation |
|---|---|
| Execution / change-capacity failure — the fatal risk; the most common way these transformations fail | Gate the program behind a funded readiness workstream + turnkey partner platform; cap concurrent initiatives; make Phase 0 a proof the org can execute |
| J-curve / liquidity trap — shared-savings cash arrives years 2–3, not day one | Re-underwrite on audited days-cash; external capital as precondition; model savings on a 3–5 yr J-curve |
| Recapture over-claim — ~70% of leak structurally locked; recaptured mix is Medi-Cal-skewed | Cap at 40–42% on one denominator; report contribution margin; validate with DRG data first |
| Anchor concentration — lives lean on RYMG/CAMG; Optum can out-bid or out-wait | Model lives without RYMG; treat each anchor as binary with a named owner; sign fast on the re-independence tailwind |
| Regulatory delay — AB1415/OHCA + AG review can bundle/slow deals | Assume one 6–12 month CMIR slip; start the 90-day clock early; stage deals individually |
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