Fairview Health Services on Tuesday announced that it has hired a new leader, turning a page on a period of turmoil in which its previous CEO retired under a cloud and merger talks broke down after intervention from the state attorney general.
Rulon Stacey, president of University of Colorado Health, will become president and CEO of Minneapolis-based Fairview on Nov. 4.
Stacey helped engineer a merger between Poudre Valley Health, where he was CEO, and the University of Colorado in January 2012. He announced in August that he would be stepping down as a leader of the merged operations on Oct. 1.
The University of Colorado is similar to Fairview in that it combines a system of hospitals and clinics with an academic medical center. Fairview operates the University of Minnesota Medical Center as well as five community hospitals, 40 primary-care clinics, pharmacies, senior services and home-care services.
"Fairview is very fortunate to welcome a new CEO who has experience leading a combined academic and community system and has such an impressive track record of improving quality by engaging employees and physicians," Chuck Mooty, Fairview Board chairman and interim CEO, said in a statement.
Fairview did not make any executives available for interviews.
Mooty took over as interim CEO in July 2012 after the hospital became embroiled in a scandal involving a Chicago-based collection service, Accretive Health.
Attorney General Lori Swanson had called out Accretive for badgering patients for payments, sometimes when they showed up for care in the emergency department.