![]() ![]() The Spheris deal with MedQuist has drawn several complaints. CEO Dan Kohl then resigned after only 13 months on the job, and the company announced plans for a debt restructuring. Net revenue for the company had reached as high as $52.3 million in early 2007 before falling to $40 million last year, shortly before the company voluntarily removed its registration with the U.S. Once considered a rising star in the healthcare document management field with a considerable presence at the Health Information and Management Systems Society’s annual conference and exhibition, Spheris fell on hard times. The judge is scheduled to receive the bids on April 13, then hold a sale hearing on April 15. MedQuist will enter the auction as a “stalking horse” bidder. That deal can’t be completed, however, until a bankruptcy judge holds an auction of Spheris’ assets. MedQuist and CBay are portfolio companies of CBay Systems Holdings, Inc. As part of the deal, Spheris would sell its non-bankrupt India business, Spheris India Private Ltd., to CBay, Inc. and Canadian operations for roughly $75.3 million in cash.Īccording to documents filed in Wilmington, Del., in February under Section 363 of the United States Bankruptcy Code, Spheris plans to sell its American and Canadian assets to MedQuist – making MedQuist the nation’s largest medical transcription provider. They will go up against MedQuist, Inc., based in Mount Laurel, N.J., which has a deal in place to acquire Franklin, Tenn.-based Spheris’ U.S. has joined Nuance Communications, headquartered in Burlington, Mass., in filing bids by the April 8 deadline. Three healthcare IT companies will submit bids at the April 13 auction for the assets of the nation’s second largest medical transcription provider, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Feb. ![]()
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