ReAwakening Health is an operator-led platform. We bring capital, operating partnership, and a tested value creation approach to hospitals facing structural pressures that have suppressed margins. Not by consolidating service lines or sending decisions to a distant home office, but rather by uncovering and funding opportunities to grow in ways that are most beneficial to the communities they serve.
ReAwakening Health is committed to creating the conditions where an ever-increasing number of small and midsized community hospitals return to thriving — with the cash flow to expand programs and better serve their community in ways that improve health within and beyond the walls of the hospital. That's why we've built three pathways for hospitals to thrive and create a new model that makes it easy for others to thrive.
Live demonstration of the model in action
We acquire and operate hospitals to prove the model works in the real world — keeping the existing leadership, clinicians, and staff while showing other hospitals exactly how to replicate it at theirs.
See how it works →Cohorts of 8–12 hospitals creating the future together
Quarterly in-person cohort meetings combine cross-pollination of bright spots with shared experimentation — so hospitals advance together as beacons for what's possible.
See how it works →Lowest-friction path to high-impact results
A customized, prioritized list of proven, low-cost solutions tailored to your hospital's biggest priorities — vetted by your peers and ready to implement.
See how it works →Capital alone has not solved the problem. Neither has consulting. Our approach pairs operators with the proven solutions they have run before — and starts with the highest-yield interventions, not a transformation roadmap.
The leadership, clinicians, and staff who know the community stay in place. Our operators work alongside them — providing capital, capacity, and a tested playbook — rather than replacing them with a remote management structure.
Our team has implemented these specific operating fixes in comparable hospitals. The first 12 months focus on revenue cycle, supply chain, and IT investments—areas where financial impact does not depend on multiyear buildout.
Strong leadership has held many hospitals together against forces that originate in payment policy, payer mix, and labor markets — not in operating discipline. The data below is why the next several years require a different kind of partner.
Two patterns are well-documented in the literature. First, when financially distressed hospitals are absorbed by larger systems, service lines are consolidated to reduce duplication — meaning behavioral health, OB, and specialty care often leave the community.* Second, the same factors that drive distress (payer mix, fixed costs, scale economics) are not solvable with incremental cost-cutting on a quarterly cadence. Both patterns shape how we structure our partnerships.
The Thriving Hospital Model is the operating playbook we deploy inside hospital partnerships. It moves a hospital through three outcome phases — each with measurable deliverables and a clear handoff to the next.
These aren't theoretical gains. They come from work our team has already done, in hospitals already running. When we combine Proven Solutions with Proven Transformation Executives, we see the lift show up in the same places, the same way, again and again.
Most transformation promises are one of two things: a technology bet that requires perfect execution, or a cost-cutting program that shrinks the hospital's role in the community. Ours is neither.
We pair solutions we've already proven work with executives who have already led the transformation — so the first 12 months don't depend on a learning curve. They depend on replication.
The operational, clinical, and revenue-cycle playbooks our team has already delivered in hospitals across the country — not prototypes, not consulting frameworks.
Operators who have actually run these transformations — at every scale from 50-bed rural to 750-bed systems — paired alongside your team, not parachuted in.
The credibility of our model lives in the people behind it. Every member of the team has led a transformation before — in hospitals, in healthcare technology, or in rewriting how large organizations run.
Each pathway is built for a different commitment level — and for a different role in catalyzing how rural and community hospitals across the country thrive.
Most intertwined · Living proof of the model · Built with the existing team
The first pathway is acquisition, where we are most actively intertwined with the hospital in order to demonstrate what is possible — so other hospitals can see the new model in action and visit to "see, touch, and feel" how it works and how they can replicate it at their hospital.
Our hospitals will continue to build and evolve the model to make sure it's easier for other hospitals to succeed and to ensure we are continuously uncovering and implementing more ways for rural and community hospitals to thrive in ways that make their communities healthier and stronger. It's important that we put our money where our mouth is and are actively operating hospitals — staying "in the game" instead of just giving advice from the stands.
An important distinction when we acquire a hospital is that we want to keep as many people from the current team as want to stay involved in the journey. Our team's role is to orchestrate the process — not to replace people or downsize the organization. We're happy to fill in or hire for any additional roles that are needed to succeed, but we want to build with the current leadership, clinicians, and staff.
That continuity is important to the community — and demonstrates that rural and community hospitals already have great people who just need the OS upgrade from the two FPIs and the new model in order for the existing team to thrive.
Hospitals already have great people who want the best for their patients and their community. We just want to make sure they have the tools and OS that allow them to thrive. This is both because it's the most effective path toward rapid lasting success — and because the biggest impact across the most number of hospitals happens when the existing teams in those hospitals see that they have the ability to do it themselves.
Just as importantly, maintaining the current leadership, clinicians, and staff keeps the local focus of the hospital on becoming the best possible fit for the needs of their community — instead of becoming a cookie-cutter franchise controlled by the generic dictates of "central command." While there are many components that can be more effectively executed with central and shared services, those should only be done to the extent that they enhance each hospital's ability to more effectively serve its patients and community.
Cohorts of 8–12 hospitals · Quarterly in-person · Pulling a thriving future into existence — together
The second pathway is our ReAwakening Health Fusion Laboratories, which brings together hospitals determined to take bold action to pull a more thriving future into existence — for themselves and others. They commit to quarterly in-person meetings with their cohort of 8–12 other hospitals, who have committed to push themselves and each other to new levels of thriving — and by doing so serve as beacons to other hospitals across the country about what is possible and how to do it.
There are two primary components: cross-pollination and shared experimentation.
The American healthcare system does everything exceptionally well… somewhere. Each hospital has figured out things that would be really helpful if applied at other hospitals — but the other hospitals generally have no idea about what's already been figured out by someone else.
Cross-pollination actively surfaces bright spots and breakthroughs at each of the hospitals, so the other hospitals in the cohort have immediate things they can do to improve their outcomes — with a live example at a peer institution that's happy to host visits and help them get it up and running. There's no need to reinvent the wheel — just facilitate active and proactive sharing of what's working and why it's working.
The cohort looks for patterns in the most pressing problems they all share, then decides what experiments each of them can undertake to uncover the best solution. They actively share progress and results, enabling them to move forward faster with the collected efforts, insights, and breakthroughs from all of the experiments — instead of going it alone.
Suddenly they're in active, roll-up-your-sleeves working groups with hospitals who are just as determined and just as committed to your success as they are to their own.
The purpose of the experiments is to ensure the group moves forward from the collective efforts and wisdom of the cohort. It's just as valuable for a hospital to come back with "we tried this and it was terrible — here's what happened and what we learned, don't waste your time" as it is "we did this and it was amazing — here's how we did it and why you should too."
And it's equally great when someone says "we tried this and it seems like it has promise, but we are stuck — we'd love your ideas of where to go from here."
Lowest lift · Highest leverage · Customized to your hospital's priorities
The third pathway is the easiest lift for a busy leadership team that wants to get results with the least amount of time and resources. We've worked with hospitals to identify the solutions that have a big impact on financial health and the achievement of strategic goals — and that have been low-friction to implement at little or no cost.
This isn't just a laundry list of solutions. We know how busy hospital leaders are, so we take the time to understand each hospital's highest priorities and most pressing problems — then curate a customized and prioritized list of solutions that will have the highest impact for your hospital.
Hospital leaders want to know about solutions that will help them achieve their desired outcomes faster, better, or easier — but they don't have time for hundreds of individual vendor meetings or the resources to research and vet solutions. Your peers have done that work already. We share the "best of the best" solutions they're using to get results at their hospitals, and ask that you share any lesser-known vendors that have made a real difference at yours — so we can pass them along to your peers.
You don't waste time on exploratory vendor calls. You only talk to the people who have solutions you want to implement.
There are plenty of lesser-known solutions that can make a big difference for rural and community hospitals — especially when combined together. Our objective is that the proven solutions that work best for rural and community hospitals get to all of the hospitals that need them, instead of being isolated to the few that have already adopted them.
We're also constantly vigilant about what hospitals are seeking that they haven't found a solution for yet — and we activate our network to search for and vet additional solutions that are emerging or looking for a pilot hospital to partner with, helping the hospital get results that haven't been available up until this point.
How they fit together — Pathway 01 is the highest-intensity work for us with a smaller number of hospitals. Pathway 02 is medium intensity with a much broader number of hospitals actively working to create the future together. Pathway 03 is lower intensity for us — and lower intensity for hospitals — and is how we help the vast majority of hospitals get the proven solutions they need to thrive.
Every month a hospital stays on the old model, the exit options narrow. Moving to The Thriving Hospital model isn't a multi-year research initiative — it's a phased transition, built on pieces our team has already run. We start with the highest-leverage revenue pillars and expand from there.
We don't start with a slide deck. We start with the two pillars that reliably create 20–31% lift.
Existing leadership, clinicians, and staff stay in place. Decisions stay tailored to the community — never reshaped into a cookie-cutter franchise run by central command.
Population health, behavioral health, and the service lines your community actually asks for.
Tell us about your hospital. We'll share where the 20–31% lift typically comes from for organizations like yours, and what the first 90 days of a Thriving Hospital transition would look like. No deck. No pressure.