About Kindred Healthcare

Kindred headquarters
The hospital and nursing home giant’s headquarters at Fourth and Broadway.

Kindred is a home-grown Louisville company that almost wasn’t.

It traces its history to the 1985 launch of a predecessor, Vencor, that ran long-term acute care hospitals. By 1999, Vencor had morphed into a much bigger enterprise, with 300 nursing homes and 60 hospitals — and too much debt. Then it got clobbered when the federal government cut Medicare payments at a time when they accounted for 30% of a typical nursing home’s revenue.

Unable to pay its bills, Vencor sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy court protection in September 1999 after suffering staggering losses: $600 million in the fourth quarter of 1998 and $64 million in the first half of 1999, according to The New York Times. Vencor warned shareholders that its very survival was at stake.

But less than two years later, April 2001, it emerged from court protection with a new name, Kindred, and a new business plan. It is now a stronger and bigger company that sums up its operations in a very long sentence:

“Kindred through its subsidiaries had approximately 102,000 employees providing healthcare services in 2,692 locations in 46 states, including 95 transitional care hospitals, 18 inpatient rehabilitation hospitals, 90 nursing centers, 19 sub-acute units, 604 Kindred at Home home health, hospice and non-medical home care sites of service, 100 inpatient rehabilitation units (hospital-based) and a contract rehabilitation services business, RehabCare, which served 1,766 non-affiliated sites of service.”

It employs about 2,200 in Louisville, including at the Fourth and Broadway headquarters downtown.

Considerable growth came last year when Kindred completed its $1.8 billion takeover of Gentiva Health Services, a big Atlanta-based provider of hospice services, at-home nursing care and physical therapy. That deal was announced in October 2014.

Kindred is one of only three Louisville companies in the Fortune 500 list of biggest businesses. In June 2016, it was ranked No. 372 — a big leap up from 491 in 2015. (The other two in Louisville are Humana, No. 52; and Yum Brands, 218.)

Benjamin Breier
Breier

Kindred is still growing. It broke ground this year on an expansion of its headquarters to house up to 500 new employees in the years ahead. The company is led by CEO Benjamin Breier.

Not to be missed: Kaleidoscope, an online gallery of writing, photography, and other artwork created by Kindred’s patients and residents.

Some key links: