| Media links |
| Attorney General's lawsuit against The Health Care Foundation, Inc. |
| Agreed Final Judgment with The Health Care Foundation, Inc. |
Funding for today’s agreement stems from the 2005 bankruptcy and closure of the Fort Worth Osteopathic Hospital. The nonprofit osteopathic hospital had provided quality treatment for Fort Worth-area patients since the mid-1940s. At the time of the hospital’s closure, it was the only remaining osteopathic hospital in Texas.
In the 1980s, The Health Care Foundation Inc. dba Osteopathic Health Foundation incorporated to support activities benefitting the hospital. Between that time and 2004, when it closed its doors, the hospital struggled with mounting debt. As a result, in February, 2005, the hospital filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy (liquidation) in Fort Worth’s federal bankruptcy court.
The Health Care Foundation agreed to pay remaining proceeds to Cook Children’s and UNT Health Science Center to advance the provision of indigent health care in the Fort Worth area. In addition, the foundation will voluntarily dissolve as part of this agreed judgment.
As a nonprofit, the Fort Worth Osteopathic Hospital served the community by providing charity care. Because the hospital’s closure reduced the availability of charity care in the area, the Attorney General’s Office worked to ensure that any available charitable assets were used to support charity care in Fort Worth. Cook Children’s and UNT Health Science Center were selected to share the $1 million in proceeds because of their well-established commitment to Fort Worth’s needy patients.