UConn Health is pursuing a major expansion, bidding $13M for Waterbury Hospital and negotiating to acquire Bristol Hospital and Day Kimball Hospital. State lawmakers approved $390M in bonding to support the strategy.
Already a Subscriber? Log in
Get Instant Access to This Article
Subscribe to Hartford Business Journal and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
- Critical Hartford and Connecticut business news updated daily.
- Immediate access to all subscriber-only content on our website.
- Bi-weekly print or digital editions of our award-winning publication.
- Special bonus issues like the Hartford Book of Lists.
- Exclusive ticket prize draws for our in-person events.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
About a year and a half after returning as CEO of UConn Health, Dr. Andrew Agwunobi is pushing a dramatic expansion of Connecticut’s public academic medical center through a series of proposed hospital acquisitions intended to achieve the economies of scale experts
say the system needs.
The strategy aims to address findings from a 2024 Cain Brothers report, which concluded UConn Health was among the smallest academic medical centers in the nation and struggles with high costs and limited scale.
Agwunobi, who returned as CEO in May 2024 after previously leading UConn Health from 2014 to 2022, said the solution lies in building a multi-hospital network that can spread costs across a larger patient base while maintaining private-sector efficiency.
UConn Health plans to acquire Waterbury Hospital, Bristol Hospital and Day Kimball Hospital in Putnam. In November, UConn Health bid $13 million to purchase Waterbury Hospital from bankrupt Prospect Medical Holdings, and subsequently outlined a $225 million, three-year turnaround plan that would return the facility to nonprofit status.
Negotiations are ongoing with Bristol and Day Kimball.
“Our focus, our primary focus, is on turning around those hospitals,” Agwunobi said. “But we believe that through this process, we will be able to achieve economies of scale by spreading some of our services.”
At the same time, UConn Health has been engaged in tough negotiations with major commercial insurers, including Aetna, UnitedHealthcare and Cigna.
Agwunobi said UConn Health receives some of the lowest commercial reimbursement rates of any hospital in Connecticut, despite being the state’s only public academic health system.
Over the past several months, UConn Health negotiated with Aetna to address that disparity. But Aetna allowed its contract with UConn Health to expire Nov. 30, leaving many Aetna members without in-network access to UConn Health providers. Aetna has said UConn Health is demanding “significantly higher reimbursement rates,” and that its proposal would “substantially increase” healthcare costs for members.
UConn Health’s contract with UnitedHealthcare ends Jan. 31, and its contract with Cigna expires April 30. The system said it remains open to continuing negotiations with all three carriers.
To support additional inpatient demand, John Dempsey Hospital received state approval earlier this year to add 23 licensed beds, which Agwunobi said will allow the hospital to serve more patients and reduce diversions to other facilities.
“We’ve grown so fast because people want to access our care,” Agwunobi said, noting UConn Health has maintained an “A” grade from Leapfrog for hospital safety for 10 consecutive rating periods.
Financial picture
UConn Health’s finances have been a point of contention over the years as the health system continues to rely on state support. In fiscal 2024, UConn Health reported an operating loss of $433.6 million, according to its annual report. However, after accounting for $203.3 million in state funding, gift revenue and other nonoperating income, the system said it ended the year with an overall $12.6 million surplus. Chief Financial Officer Jeff Geoghegan recently reported an overall $15.2 million surplus in fiscal 2025, driven largely by stronger performance in the health system’s clinical operations, which include John Dempsey Hospital, UConn Medical Group and pharmacy programs. Reducing reliance on state appropriations has been a priority for Agwunobi since his return, and recent state budget decisions have accelerated that shift. UConn Health received $193.8 million in state support in fiscal 2025, and lawmakers approved $143.5 million for fiscal 2026 — a reduction of more than $50 million from the system’s request and well below its fiscal 2024 state allocation. The cut dropped state support from roughly 12% of UConn Health’s budget in fiscal 2025 to about 8% in fiscal 2026. To address the funding reduction, UConn Health in June launched an initiative called Project Thrive to identify $46.7 million in budget savings or additional revenue. It also hired Huron Consulting Group, which specializes in healthcare operational improvement and revenue cycle management, to support the effort. At UConn Health’s Dec. 1 Board of Directors meeting, Agwunobi said the system has realized $22.3 million toward that target, with annual savings estimated at $38.3 million. He said the system has boosted clinical revenue through higher patient volume, reduced travel and catering expenses, renegotiated vendor contracts, slowed hiring for noncritical positions, reduced overtime and achieved one-time savings on capital spending and workers’ compensation costs, among other efforts. Agwunobi said UConn Health chose to absorb the state funding reduction through clinical growth and operational changes rather than seek restored appropriations. State support for its clinical operations, he noted, has dropped to $10 million this year, down from $60 million last year. The rest of the state funding supports UConn Health’s academic and research enterprises. “In the next very short period of time, we expect to be able to eliminate that $10 million to the clinical enterprise,” Agwunobi said. “But that will require continuing on this path of public-private partnership growth.” Agwunobi said UConn Health has seen more than 30% clinical growth over the past three years. Net patient revenue has more than doubled, from roughly $450 million to more than $1 billion by the end of fiscal 2025.
To support additional inpatient demand, John Dempsey Hospital received state approval earlier this year to add 23 licensed beds, which Agwunobi said will allow the hospital to serve more patients and reduce diversions to other facilities.
“We’ve grown so fast because people want to access our care,” Agwunobi said, noting UConn Health has maintained an “A” grade from Leapfrog for hospital safety for 10 consecutive rating periods.
