Hartford HealthCare Ditches Downtown Offices for Farmington
One of downtown Hartford’s major office tenants is decamping for the suburbs.
One of downtown Hartford’s major office tenants is decamping for the suburbs.
With the COVID-19 pandemic severely disrupting its finances as elective surgeries and other non-emergency but revenue-generating treatments are cancelled, Hartford Healthcare says it’s reconsidering plans for a $24 million renovation and expansion at 100 Pearl St. in downtown Hartford.
The Hartford HealthCare hospital system will be the new occupants of six floors at downtown Hartford’s 100 Pearl St. tower following the signing of one of the city’s biggest commercial leases in recent months.
Hartford HealthCare and the Yale New Haven Health System plan to build a $72 million proton beam therapy center in Wallingford.
Seeking to bring high-quality health care closer to people east of Hartford, Hartford HealthCare this month opened a $10.4 million, 3-story building focused on delivering advanced cancer services and treatment.
Hartford HealthCare is acquiring substantially all of the assets of St. Vincent’s Medical Center, an agreement that includes a licensed 473-bed hospital, an inpatient psychiatric facility and more than 3,200 workers.
Yale New Haven Health is trying to acquire Milford Hospital, one of the last independent hospitals in Connecticut.
A 27,685-square-foot medical office building has sold in Plainville, according to the Hartford Business Journal. The building is a part of a cluster of health care-oriented properties, including Hartford HealthCare Medical Arts Building and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
Tomasso Brothers Inc. has sold a medical office building for $5.5 million. The 27,685-square-foot building is located at 440 New Britain Ave. in Plainville.
Hartford HealthCare and Tufts Health Plan announced yesterday the creation of a new health plan through the formation of a joint venture, CarePartners of Connecticut Inc. This is the first collaboration of its kind in Connecticut.
Connecticut lawmakers were urged Tuesday to consider ways to possibly avoid or mitigate any future contract impasses between insurance companies and health care systems, like the seven-week dispute between Hartford HealthCare and Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield that affected tens of thousands of residents.
Connecticut Comptroller Kevin Lembo is urging Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield and Hartford HealthCare to reach a deal to keep thousands of residents from paying much higher costs for health care.
Connecticut patients who receive medical care through Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield could face higher costs after the insurance provider and Hartford HealthCare failed to agree on a new three-year contract.