What do the highest-paid nonprofit hospital CEOs have in common?

Nonprofit hospitals have been in the news for paying their executives millions amid layoffs and decreasing community investment. Why do nonprofit hospitals and systems pay their CEOs so much, and which organizations are paying the most? We took a look at the ten highest-paid hospital and system CEOs from 2021 in the Lown Hospitals Index to learn more.

Highest-paid nonprofit non-system CEOs, FYE 2021

This list only includes hospital CEOs that are not also the CEO of a larger hospital system (consisting of two or more hospitals). See the next table for hospital system CEOs. The list only includes hospitals in the Lown Hospitals Index (does not include children’s hospitals, specialty hospitals, or federally-run hospitals).

Hospital (state)CEO Total compensationNotes
Froedtert Pleasant Prairie Hospital (WI)Richard Schmidt Jr$7.5 millionTax ID 390816845 
Includes deferred compensation returns paid out in fiscal year 2021
Covenant Medical Center Harrison (MI)Edward Bruff$5.2 mTax ID 383369438
Includes deferred compensation from retirement plan
Cooper University Hospital (NJ)Anthony Mazzarelli, Kevin O’Dowd $4.9 mTax ID 210634462
Includes compensation for two co-ceo/presidents who served this year
Grady Memorial Hospital (GA)John Haupert $4.1 mTax ID 262037695
Includes retirement plan payments
Walnut Creek Medical Center (CA)Jane Willemsen$4.1 mTax ID 941461843
Includes payments from supplemental executive plan. Willemsen is also CEO of John Muir Concord Hospital.
UChicago Medicine (IL)Thomas Jackiewicz, Sharon O’keefe$3.6 mTax ID 363488183
Includes compensation for two CEOs who served this year. Includes supplemental executive retirement plan payouts to Sharon O’Keefe
White Plains Hospital (NY)Susan Fox$3.6 mTax ID 131740130 $1.25M is bonus/incentive compensation
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center (NC) Julie Freischlag$3.5 mTax ID 560552787$1M is bonus/incentive compensation. Freischlag was also dean of Wake Forest University School of Medicine during this time.
Westchester Medical Center (NY)Michael Israel$3.4 mSource: https://www.seethroughny.net/payrolls
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center (OH)Eric Beck, Daniel Simon $3.4 mTax ID 900059117
Includes compensation for two CEOs who served this year

Highest-paid nonprofit system CEOs, FYE 2021

Hospital systemCEO Total compensationNotes
Sentara HealthcareHoward Kern$33.2 mTax ID 521271901
Includes distributions from Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
CommonSpirit HealthKevin Lofton, Lloyd  Dean$32 mTax ID 470617373
Includes compensation for Kevin Lofton, former CEO
Nuvance HealthJohn Murphy$30.1 mTax ID 834214573
Includes distributions from Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
RWJBarnabas HealthBarry Ostrowsky$17.3 mTax ID 222405279
Includes distributions from Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
CHRISTUS HealthErnie Sadau$17 mTax ID 760590551
Includes retirement compensation
Kaiser PermanenteGregory Adams$15.6 mTax ID 941105628$10.6M is bonus/incentive payments
Mercy Health (Missouri)James Britton$15.3 mTax ID 431423050
Includes distributions from Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
Ascension HealthcareJoseph Impicciche$13 mTax ID 311662309$10.8M is bonus/incentive compensation
NYU Langone HealthRobert Grossman $12.7 mTax ID 133971298
Includes compensation as Dean of NYU School of Medicine
Banner HealthPeter Fine$12.4 mTax ID 450233470
Includes payouts from long-term incentive plan

Bonus pay and other incentives

In order to recruit and retain talent, nonprofit hospital boards have included incentives for executives such as supplemental retirement plans and long-term incentive plans, which contribute to the high payouts for many of these hospitals in 2021. 

Other executives received multi-million dollar bonuses or incentive payments, although the metrics behind those incentives can be vague. For example, Ascension’s tax form does not include how CEO incentive pay was structured, despite their CEO receiving more than $10 million in bonuses that year. White Plains Hospital Medical Center’s tax form is low on details for incentive pay, writing that bonuses were “based on the individual’s performance and accomplishments as determined by either the Compensation Board or management discretion.” Kaiser’s tax form has more information on incentives, including “quality of care and service, membership growth, operating income, per member expense trend, and community benefit” as organizational goals for potential bonuses. 

Compensation consultant trend

Some of these hospitals also mention the use of “independent compensation consultants” in the process of creating compensation plans for executives. Of the hospitals and systems with the highest total compensation in 2021, all of them with Form 990s available indicate that they used a compensation consultant “to establish the compensation of the organization’s CEO/Executive Director.” The increasing prevalence of consultants could be a factor in driving up CEO pay for nonprofit hospitals, as it has in other industries.

Variation in CEO pay

However, not all hospital CEOs get paid astronomical amounts, even similar-sized organizations in the same regions. The CEO of UVA Health system in Virginia made a little over a million dollars, compared to $33 million for Sentara’s CEO. In the White Plains, New York area, the CEO of Phelps Hospital and St Luke’s Cornwall Hospital made less than a million dollars, compared to the CEOs of White Plains Hospital and Westchester Medical Center, both of whom made more than $3 million that year. And in Wisconsin, several hospitals with patient revenue similar Froedtert Pleasant Prairie Hospital paid their CEOs less than $1 million in 2021, including SSM St Mary’s Hospital and St. Vincent Hospital

Leading a hospital system is not an easy job, but when the CEO is making more than 1,000 times as much as the housekeeping staff, it’s worth asking what we get for such high CEO compensation.