I want the record profits hospitals and the CEO of said hospitals get to go to things like: Research, training, pay raises for all staff from doctors down and staffing.
Out of about 5000 hospitals in the US, 4000 are either not-for-profit or publicly owned (county/city). While there are extremes in every industry, considering the risks that come with the job and the size of the organizations, I dont believe that most hospital CEOs are overpaid.
There was a time in the past when operating a for-profit hospital was a good business. While there are still a couple of hospitals with good profit margins, often they are the flagship in a larger system and have to feed a couple of smaller community places with negative margins. The average community hospital in the US breaks even in a good year. There are a couple of investor owned specialty hospitals (cardiology, orthopedics) that make silly money, good for them, I wish I could have gotten in on that racket .
Some non-profits are quite profitable, but the way they work, their profit doesn't go to investors but has to be plowed back into mission related work. As with the for-profit systems, often that is the support of smaller feeder hospitals that operate at a loss. The median operating margin for non-profit hospitals in 2013 was 2.2%, down from 2.5-2.7% in prior years. Is that an outrageous amount ?