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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.)
Filed by the Registrant  X
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant  
Check the appropriate box:
 Preliminary Proxy Statement
 Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
X Definitive Proxy Statement
 Definitive Additional Materials
 Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12
DAVITA INC.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
 
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)


Payment of Filing Fee (Check all boxes that apply):
XNo fee required.
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Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.























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Notice of 2024 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement



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April 26, 2024

Dear Fellow Stockholders:

In 2023, DaVita embraced a refreshed vision — an unwavering pursuit of a healthier tomorrow — to reflect our commitment to setting a new standard for healthcare services. This reflects a bold commitment to deliver high-quality care to our patients, provide purpose-driven career opportunities for our teammates, make a positive impact on the communities we serve and create value for our stakeholders. In 2023, we made meaningful progress to advance our vision. Specifically, we:

provided integrated kidney care services to approximately 58,000 patients in risk-based arrangements and to an additional 17,000 patients in other integrated care arrangements, together an increase of more than 30 percent year-over-year,
achieved the highest number of annual transplants in our history, with more than 8,000 DaVita patients receiving a kidney transplant,
advanced innovation in kidney care through the launch of Mozarc Medical, our co-investment with Medtronic, dedicated to improving access, experience and outcomes for kidney patients treating at home,
achieved a new Kidney Smart® milestone: providing no-cost, comprehensive kidney health education to more than 37,000 people in 2023,
advanced our digital modernization plan with the national deployment of our next generation clinical platform, and
demonstrated operating rigor to grow operating income by approximately 20 percent over last year.

These results are driven by the passion and dedication of our teammates, the majority of whom are clinical caregivers. In 2023, we completed the expansion of Clinical Ladders, our career pathways program for nurses and patient care technicians, offering teammates role clarity and access to the development opportunities that support their professional ambitions. Through Clinical Ladders, we have celebrated more than 20,000 promotions, while more than 2,000 teammates1 are pursuing or have received their nursing degree, funded by DaVita, as part of our Bridge to Your Dreams program. DaVita is also doing its part to address the industry-wide clinician shortage by collaborating with universities to create an equitable pipeline to health care practice.

At the same time, we continue efforts to increase diverse representation at every level of the organization. Our U.S. teammate population is composed of 78% women1 and 57% people of color1, and we have created an environment where more than 80% of all teammates feel like they belong based on 2023 teammate surveys. Together with this dedicated team, we remain committed to the essential role DaVita plays in delivering life-sustaining care to patients in communities across the United States and around the world.

Board Composition Reflecting a Demonstrated Commitment to Refreshment and Diversity

Your Board remains committed to maintaining a balance of tenure, skills, experience and a diversity of backgrounds and viewpoints.

In July 2023, we appointed Wendy Schoppert to join the Board as a new independent director. Ms. Schoppert brings to our Board more than 30 years of leadership experience across the consumer products, financial services, and airline industries. Lending her deep board experience, Ms. Schoppert serves on both the Audit Committee and the Compliance and Quality Committee.
In April 2024, we appointed Dennis Pullin to join the Board as an independent director. Mr. Pullin is a
1 As of December 31, 2023.



thought leader and advocate for health equity with more than 30 years of experience in executive leadership positions in hospitals, academic medical centers, physician group practices, and private industry. Mr. Pullin serves on the Compliance and Quality Committee.

As a Company and a Board, we believe that diversity of background, thought and experience enhances our effectiveness. With the addition of Ms. Schoppert and Mr. Pullin, DaVita’s director nominees include ten highly qualified directors, with 20% racial/ethnic diversity, 40% gender diversity and an average tenure for our nominees of approximately six years.2

Year-round Engagement with Stockholders that Includes Independent Directors

Stockholder engagement is of great importance to our Board and management team as a means to regularly solicit feedback and to ensure accountability to our stockholders. Since our 2023 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, we reached out to stockholders representing approximately 81% of shares outstanding and through some combination of management, the Chair of our Board, and the Chair of our Compensation Committee, we connected with stockholders representing approximately 46% of DaVita's outstanding shares.3 In recent years, these discussions have helped inform our corporate governance, our Environmental, Social and Governance (“ESG”) strategy, our compensation practices, and further enhancements to our political and lobbying spending disclosures, among other things.

Commitment to Corporate Social Responsibility

Our “community first” philosophy extends from the compassionate care we provide to our patients to also include how we care for our teammates, the communities we serve and the environment. This sets the foundation for our ESG focus areas. The Dow Jones Sustainability World Indices recognized DaVita for the sixth consecutive year for our corporate responsibility initiatives and ESG practices. Our annual Community Care report reinforces our long-standing commitment to corporate citizenship and celebrates the meaningful progress made toward our goals.

Selected social responsibility highlights from this past year include:

The 2023 DaVita Health Tour provided thousands of community members across the country with free health screenings and education focused on kidney health.
Through a sponsorship of the American Diabetes Association ("ADA"), DaVita and the ADA provided digital educational content aimed at helping those living with diabetes prevent and manage kidney disease.
Through support from the DaVita Giving Foundation, the Food is Medicine Coalition provided 140,000+ medically tailored meals to people with food insecurity and medical nutrition needs, including individuals living with end stage kidney disease.
Our virtual power purchase agreements continue to produce enough renewable energy to power 100% of our U.S. operations.
Our first net zero dialysis clinic is now operational.
100+ million gallons of water were saved through water efficiency projects.
Our 2023 climate change score of “A-” from CDP, formerly known as the Carbon Disclosure Project, a global nonprofit that runs the world’s leading environmental disclosure platform, was in the highest "Leadership" category. DaVita is the only North American health care provider to achieve this distinction.

To learn more, we encourage you to read our 2023 Community Care social responsibility report, which will be available at www.davitacommunitycare.com.


2 Each of the diversity and tenure statistics is calculated as of April 26, 2024.
3 Calculations relating to all stockholder outreach statistics were performed using stockholders of DaVita shares outstanding as of September 30, 2023.



Annual Meeting of Stockholders

Our 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Annual Meeting") will be held on Thursday, June 6, 2024, at 10:00 AM Mountain Time. The attached Notice of Annual Meeting and accompanying Proxy Statement will serve as your guide to the business to be conducted at the Annual Meeting and provide details on attending the virtual meeting.

To our stockholders, thank you for your trust and investment in DaVita. With your support and feedback, we will continue our unwavering pursuit of a healthier tomorrow.

Very truly yours,
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Javier J. Rodriguez
Pamela M. Arway
Director and Chief Executive OfficerIndependent Chair of the Board

This letter, and the accompanying Proxy Statement, contain or refer to certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Please see the section of the Proxy Statement titled “General Information — Forward-Looking Statements” below for more information regarding these forward-looking statements.




Notice of 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
The 2024 Annual Meeting of the Stockholders (the "Annual Meeting") of DaVita Inc., a Delaware corporation ("DaVita" or the "Company"), will be a virtual-only meeting to be held as a live audio webcast over the Internet at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/DVA2024 on Thursday, June 6, 2024 at 10:00 AM Mountain Time.

Meeting Agenda and Voting Matters
Stockholders will be asked to vote on the following matters at the DaVita 2024 Annual Meeting:
Items of BusinessBoard RecommendationWhere to Find More Information in the Proxy Statement
To vote upon the election of the ten director nominees, identified in the accompanying Proxy Statement, to the Board of Directors, each to serve until the Company's 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders or until their successors are duly elected and qualified;
"FOR" all nomineesPages 1 - 7
To ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for fiscal year 2024; and
"FOR"Page 25
To approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of our named executive officers.
"FOR"Page 26
We also intend to transact such other business as may properly be brought before the Annual Meeting and any adjournment or postponement thereof.

Your vote is important. Please vote promptly. Information on voting deadlines and available voting methods are set out in the accompanying Proxy Statement under the heading "How to Vote."
Stockholders of record as of the close of business on April 10, 2024 (the "Record Date") will be entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting. During the ten days prior to the Annual Meeting, you may contact Investor Relations at 1-888-484-7505 to request the list of stockholders entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting.
IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIALS
FOR THE 2024 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS TO
BE HELD ON JUNE 6, 2024:

The Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders, Proxy Statement and Annual Report are available at www.proxyvote.com.
By order of the Board of Directors,
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Samantha A. Caldwell
Corporate Secretary
April 26, 2024 



Table of Contents



Table of Contents



Corporate Governance
The general corporate governance framework for DaVita Inc., a Delaware corporation ("DaVita" or the "Company") is set by its Amended and Restated Bylaws (the "Bylaws"), Corporate Governance Guidelines ("Guidelines"), the charters for each of the Committees of our Board of Directors (the "Board"), the Code of Ethics and the Code of Conduct. Each of these governance documents is available under the Corporate Governance section of our website, located at www.davita.com/about/corporate-governance.
Proposal 1 Election of Directors
At the 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Annual Meeting"), stockholders will elect ten directors each to serve until the Company's 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "2025 Annual Meeting") or until their successors are duly elected and qualified, subject to such director’s earlier death, resignation, disqualification or removal.
Voting Standard for Director Elections
The Bylaws require that, in uncontested elections, each director be elected by the majority of votes cast by the holders of shares present virtually or represented by proxy and entitled to vote thereon. In a contested election, directors are elected by a plurality of shares represented virtually or by proxy at any such meeting and entitled to vote thereon. If a nominee for director who served as a director prior to the Annual Meeting is not elected by the requisite vote, the director must promptly tender his or her resignation from the Board, and the Nominating and Governance Committee will make a recommendation to the Board about whether to accept or reject the resignation. The Board, excluding the director in question, will act on the recommendation of the Nominating and Governance Committee and publicly disclose its decision and its rationale within 90 days (or, if extended by the Board in certain circumstances, within 180 days) from the date the election results are certified. If a nominee for director who was not already serving as a director does not receive the requisite vote at the Annual Meeting, the nominee is not elected to the Board. All 2024 director nominees are currently serving on the Board.
Director Nominees
After a thorough evaluation, and in alignment with the Nominating and Governance Committee's recommendation, the Board has nominated Pamela M. Arway, Charles G. Berg, Barbara J. Desoer, Jason M. Hollar, Gregory J. Moore, M.D., Ph.D., Dennis W. Pullin, Javier J. Rodriguez, Adam H. Schechter, Wendy L. Schoppert, and Phyllis R. Yale for election as directors. Mr. Nehra, who has reached the age of retirement under the Board retirement policy contained in the Company's Guidelines, will retire from the Board effective as of the date of the Annual Meeting. We thank Mr. Nehra for his service and his many valuable contributions to the Board. After a robust search process, utilizing the assistance of a third party search firm, Ms. Schoppert was appointed as a member of the Board in July 2023, and Mr. Pullin was appointed as a member of the Board in April 2024. Each of Ms. Schoppert and Mr. Pullin were recommended to the Nominating and Governance Committee by independent directors. Please see the section titled “Corporate Governance — Selection of Directors” below for more information about the nomination process.
None of the director nominees has any family relationship with any other nominee or with any of our executive officers and no arrangement or understanding exists between any nominee and any other person or persons pursuant to which a nominee was or is to be selected as a director or nominee. Nine of the ten director nominees are independent under the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") listing standards (the "NYSE Independence Standards"). Please see the section titled “Corporate Governance — Director Independence” below for more information. Each director nominee has consented to being named as a nominee in this Proxy Statement and has agreed to serve as a director, if elected.


1


Proxies
Unless a stockholder has made a contrary direction via its proxy, the proxy holders named in the proxy card (the “Company Proxies”) have advised us that at the Annual Meeting they intend to vote the shares covered by the proxies "for" the election of each of the director nominees named in this Proxy Statement. If any director nominee is unable or unwilling to serve, the Company Proxies may vote for the election of the substitute nominee that the Board may propose. Proxies may not be voted for more than ten director nominees.
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Notice of 2024 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement
2


Biographies of our Director Nominees
A biography of each director nominee, as of April 26, 2024, setting forth his or her age, and describing his or her business experience during the past five years, including other prior relevant business experience, is presented below.


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Former President of the Japan, Asia-Pacific, Australia Region, American Express International, Inc.
Independent Director Since: 2009
Board Chair Since: 2020
Committee Service: Compensation Committee; Nominating and Governance Committee
Other Public Company Boards:
Iron Mountain Inc. (NYSE: IRM)
The Hershey Company (NYSE:HSY)


Pamela M. Arway, 70, served as the President of the Japan, Asia-Pacific, Australia region for American Express International, Inc., a global payment services and travel company, from 2005 to 2008. Ms. Arway joined the American Express Company in 1987, and subsequently served in various capacities, including as Chief Executive Officer ("CEO") of American Express Australia Limited from 2004 to 2005 and as Executive Vice President of Corporate Travel, North America from 2000 to 2004. Prior to her retirement in October 2008, she also served as advisor to the American Express Company’s Chairman and CEO. Since May 2010 Ms. Arway has served as a member of the Board of Directors of The Hershey Company, a chocolate and confectionery company, and she will not stand for re-election at their 2024 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. Ms. Arway has been a member of the Board of Directors of Iron Mountain Incorporated, an enterprise information management services company since March 2014. Ms. Arway brings to the Board significant leadership experience as a global executive, with extensive management experience in the areas of marketing, international business, finance and government affairs. With her service as a director on the boards of other large public companies, Ms. Arway also brings significant experience in corporate governance and executive compensation-related matters.


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Former Senior Advisor, The Cigna Group
Independent Director Since: 2022
Director Since: 2007
Committee Service: Compliance and Quality Committee; Nominating and Governance Committee





Charles G. Berg, 66, served as a Senior Advisor for The Cigna Group (“Cigna”), a global health service company, from January 2023 to June 2023, and served as President of U.S. Government Business and Senior Advisor for Cigna from January 2022 to January 2023. Mr. Berg served as Executive Chair of DaVita Medical Group, DaVita's former integrated healthcare business, from November 2016 until December 2017. From 2008 to 2013, Mr. Berg served as Executive Chair of WellCare Health Plans, Inc. (“WellCare”), a provider of managed care services for government-sponsored healthcare programs. Mr. Berg served as Non-Executive Chair of the Board of Directors of WellCare from January 2011 until May 2013. From January 2007 to April 2009, Mr. Berg was a Senior Advisor to Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe, a private equity firm. From April 1998 to July 2004, Mr. Berg held various executive positions, including Executive Vice President - Medical Delivery, President and Chief Operating Officer ("COO") with Oxford Health Plans, Inc. (“Oxford”), a health benefit plan provider. He was the CEO when Oxford was acquired by UnitedHealth Group. He then became an executive of UnitedHealth Group and was primarily responsible for integrating the Oxford business. Mr. Berg also currently serves as a member of the Operating Council & Senior Advisory Board of Consonance Capital Partners, a private equity firm. Mr. Berg is an experienced business leader with significant experience in the healthcare industry and brings to the Board an understanding of the operational, financial and regulatory aspects of our industry and business.
3





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Former Chief Executive Officer, Citibank, N.A.
Independent Director Since: 2015
Committee Service: Compensation Committee, Chair; Audit Committee
Other Public Company Boards:
Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C)


Barbara J. Desoer, 71, served as the CEO and a member of the Board of Directors of Citibank, N.A., a wholly owned subsidiary of Citigroup, Inc., a diversified global financial services company, both positions she held from April 2014 through April 2019, and COO of Citibank, N.A. from October 2013 to April 2014. Prior to Citibank, N.A., Ms. Desoer spent 35 years at Bank of America, a diversified global financial services company, most recently as President, Bank of America Home Loans, where she led the integration of Countrywide, the largest mortgage originator and servicer in the United States. In previous Bank of America roles, Ms. Desoer served as a Global Technology & Operations executive, an international market-focused position leading teams in the United Kingdom, Asia and Latin America, and President, Consumer Products. Since April 2019, Ms. Desoer has served as Chair of Citibank, N.A. and as a director of Citigroup, Inc. She serves on the Advisory Board of InStride. Ms. Desoer is an experienced business leader with extensive management and international experience and brings to the Board a deep understanding of regulated businesses.


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Chief Executive Officer, Cardinal Health, Inc.
Independent Director Since: 2022
Committee Service: Audit Committee, Chair
Other Public Company Boards:
Cardinal Health, Inc.(NYSE: CAH)


Jason M. Hollar, 51, has served as the CEO and a member of the Board of Directors of Cardinal Health, Inc. ("Cardinal"), a global integrated healthcare services and products company, since September 2022. Prior to his appointment as CEO, Mr. Hollar served as Chief Financial Officer for Cardinal from May 2020 to September 2022, where he led financial activities across the enterprise including financial strategy, capital deployment, treasury, tax, investor relations, accounting and reporting. Prior to Cardinal, from June 2018 until April 2020, Mr. Hollar served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Tenneco Inc. ("Tenneco"), a global automotive products and services company, where he was responsible for financial planning and analysis, accounting and reporting, tax, treasury and investor relations for the company. At Tenneco, Mr. Hollar also served as Senior Vice President, Finance from June 2017 to June 2018. From October 2016 to June 2017, Mr. Hollar served as the Chief Financial Officer of Sears Holding Corporation ("Sears"), a holding company for large consumer retailers across the U.S., and as Senior Vice President, Finance from October 2014 to October 2016. Sears filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October 2018. Mr. Hollar is an experienced finance leader who brings to the Board more than 25 years of financial and operational experience spanning the healthcare, transportation, manufacturing and retail sectors.

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Former Corporate Vice President, Microsoft Health and Life Sciences
Independent Director Since: 2021
Committee Service: Compliance and Quality Committee, Chair; Nominating and Governance Committee
Other Public Company Boards:
Olink Holding AB (publ) (NASDAQ: OLK)


Gregory J. Moore, M.D., Ph.D., 59, served as Corporate Vice President for Microsoft Health and Life Sciences, a division of Microsoft Corporation ("Microsoft"), a multinational technology company that produces computer software, cloud computing services, personal computers and electronics, and other related services, from 2019 to 2023, where he led Microsoft's health and life sciences research and artificial intelligence ("AI") and cloud product development portfolio. Prior to Microsoft, Dr. Moore served as Vice President of Google Inc. ("Google"), a multinational technology company that specializes in Internet-related products and services, from 2016 to 2019, and was the founder and leader of Google Cloud Healthcare and Life Sciences globally. Dr. Moore is an engineer, practicing physician, and experienced educator. He is board certified in Diagnostic Radiology, Neuroradiology and Clinical Informatics. Prior to his leadership roles at Microsoft and Google, Dr. Moore served as the Chief Emerging Technology and Informatics Officer at Geisinger Health System, a regional healthcare provider, where he was also Director of the Institute of Advanced Application. His prior academic and clinical appointments include Stanford University School of Medicine, Penn State University College of Medicine, and Wayne State University School of Medicine. Since 2023, Dr. Moore has served as a director of Olink Holding AB, a biotechnology company focused on proteomics. From 2019 until its merger with Baxter International Inc. in 2021, Dr. Moore was a member of the Board of Directors of Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc., a medical technology provider and in 2024, Dr. Moore earned the CERT Certificate in Cybersecurity Oversight. Dr. Moore brings to the Board substantial experience both in the medical field as a practitioner and as a technology executive experienced in digital health and AI.
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President and CEO, Virtua Health

Independent Director Since: 2024

Committee Service:
Compliance and Quality Committee

Other Public Company Boards:
Hillenbrand, Inc., (NYSE: HI)


Dennis W. Pullin, 64, has served as President and CEO of Virtua Health ("Virtua"), an academic health system in New Jersey offering a range of preventative, primary, ambulatory, acute and tertiary care since 2017. From 2009 to 2017, Mr. Pullin served as President of MedStar Harbor Hospital, a not-for-profit, community-based health care organization in the U.S. Mid-Atlantic region. From 2006 to 2009, Mr. Pullin served as Chief Operating Officer and Senior Vice President of MedStar Washington Hospital Center, the largest private teaching and research hospital based in Washington, D.C. Mr. Pullin served as Vice President of Operations and Business Development at CHI St. Luke’s Health, a tertiary community teaching hospital in the Texas Medical Center from 2002 to 2006. Mr. Pullin brings to the Board his deep executive leadership experience in the healthcare space, including in hospitals, academic medical centers, physician group practices, and private industry. He also brings to the Board a unique and valuable perspective on transforming patient experience through the use of technology.
5




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Chief Executive Officer, DaVita Inc.
Director Since: 2019
Other Public Company Boards:
Gilead Sciences, Inc. (NASDAQ: GILD)


Javier J. Rodriguez, 53, has served as our CEO since June 2019. From March 2014 until June 2019, he served as the CEO of DaVita Kidney Care. Since joining the Company in 1998, Mr. Rodriguez has served in a number of different capacities. From February 2012 to March 2014, he served as our President. From April 2006 through February 2012, he served as our Senior Vice President. From 2000 to 2006 he served as a Vice President of Operations and Payor Contracting. Mr. Rodriguez joined the Company in 1998 as a Director of Value Management. Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Rodriguez worked for Baxter Healthcare Corporation in Finance from 1995 to 1996. He also previously served as Director of Operations for CBS Marketing Inc. in Mexico City. Since June 2020, Mr. Rodriguez has been a member of the Board of Directors of Gilead Sciences, Inc., a research-based pharmaceutical company. Mr. Rodriguez provides extensive knowledge of our industry, business, regulatory environment and operations as well as significant executive leadership and management experience.


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President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board, Labcorp

Independent Director Since: 2022

Committee Service: Audit Committee; Compensation Committee

Other Public Company Boards:
Labcorp (NYSE: LH)


Adam H. Schechter, 59, has served as Chairman of the Board of Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings ("Labcorp"), a leading global life sciences company, since May 2020, as a director of Labcorp since April 2013, and President and CEO since November 2019. Mr. Schechter previously served as special advisor to the CEO of Merck & Co., Inc. (“Merck”), a multinational pharmaceutical company, from January 2019 to July 2019. From 2010 to 2018, Mr. Schechter was an Executive Vice President of Merck, where he was a member of Merck’s executive committee, pharmaceutical and vaccines operating committee, and President of Merck’s Global Human Health Division, which included Merck’s worldwide pharmaceutical and vaccine businesses. Prior to becoming President, Global Human Health, Mr. Schechter served as President, Global Pharmaceutical Business of Merck from 2007 to 2010. In 2022, Mr. Schechter earned the CERT Certificate in Cybersecurity Oversight. Mr. Schechter brings to the Board extensive knowledge of the healthcare industry, operations and regulatory environment, significant executive leadership and management experience. In addition, his CERT Certificate in Cybersecurity Oversight strengthens and further complements the experience and expertise of the Board with respect to cybersecurity matters.
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Former Chief Financial Officer, Sleep Number Corp.

Independent Director Since: 2023

Committee Service: Audit Committee; Compliance and Quality Committee

Other Public Company Boards:
The ODP Corporation (NASDAQ: ODP)
Big Lots, Inc. (NYSE: BIG)


Wendy L. Schoppert, 57, served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Sleep Number Corp. ("Sleep Number"), a smart bed and wellness technology manufacturer and retailer, from 2011 to 2014, where she also previously served as Chief Information Officer and led Marketing, Digital, International, and New Channel Development. Prior to joining Sleep Number in 2005, Ms. Schoppert led U.S. Bank’s Private Asset Management team and served as Head of Product, Marketing & Corporate Development for U.S. Bank’s Asset Management division. She began her career in the airline industry, serving in various financial, strategic and general management leadership positions at American Airlines, Northwest Airlines and America West Airlines. Ms. Schoppert is also a member of the boards of The ODP Corporation, the parent company of Office Depot/OfficeMax and related B2B businesses, and Big Lots, Inc., a discount home retailer, and from 2017 to 2023 served on the Board of The Hershey Company. Ms. Schoppert is a former co-chair of the Minnesota Chapter of Women Corporate Directors and has also earned the CERT Certificate in Cybersecurity Oversight. Ms. Schoppert is an experienced finance leader who brings to the Board financial, information technology, marketing and operational experience spanning the consumer goods, transportation, and retail sectors. Her CERT Certificate in Cybersecurity Oversight strengthens and further complements the experience and expertise of the Board with respect to cybersecurity matters.


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Advisory Partner, Bain & Company, Inc.

Independent Director Since: 2016

Committee Service: Nominating and Governance Committee, Chair; Compliance and Quality Committee

Other Public Company Boards:
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (NYSE: BMY)


Phyllis R. Yale, 66, has been an Advisory Partner with Bain & Company, Inc. (“Bain”), a global management consulting firm, since July 2010. Ms. Yale was a Partner with Bain from 1987 to July 2010, and a leader in building Bain’s healthcare practice. In her role at Bain, Ms. Yale works with healthcare payors, providers, and medical device companies, and frequently advises the world’s leading private equity firms on their investments in the healthcare sector. She has served as a member of the board of directors of several public and private companies in the healthcare sector, and since November 2019 has served as a member of the Board of Directors of Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, a global biopharmaceutical company, and since 2014 has served as a member of the Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts ("BCBS MA"). Ms. Yale previously served as Chair of the BCBS MA Board of Directors from 2014 to 2019 and Chair of the Board of Directors of Kindred Healthcare, Inc. from 2010 to 2018. Ms. Yale has a deep knowledge base in the U.S. healthcare sector and has experience in many aspects of the healthcare industry, including corporate strategies, marketing and cost and quality management, as well as mergers and acquisitions.

The Board recommends a vote FOR the election of each of the
named director nominees.
7


Corporate Governance Highlights
The Board believes that a strong corporate governance program supports long-term stockholder interests. The Board monitors evolving governance standards and regularly seeks stockholder feedback on many of these topics. Some key features of the Company’s corporate governance program include:
ü
Annual election of all directors and ongoing commitment to Board refreshment
The Company's Guidelines require that the Board maintain an average tenure for all independent directors of no more than 12 years. Since the beginning of 2021, the Board has appointed five new independent directors, bringing our total average Board tenure to 6 years.1
ü
Year-round stockholder engagement, including regular engagement with independent directors
ü
Stockholder right to call special meetings of stockholders at 10% ownership threshold
ü
No stockholder rights plan/poison pill
ü
Robust Code of Conduct
ü
Independent non-executive chair
ü
Each Board Committee has authority to retain independent advisors
üMajority vote standard in uncontested elections
ü
Fulsome stock ownership guidelines for senior executives and directors that link the interests of management and the Board with those of stockholders
üCommitment to corporate environmental and social responsibility practices, overseen by the Nominating and Governance Committee
ü
Significant risk oversight practices
The Board regularly receives reports from each of its Committees, which provide detail on risk management issues and management's response. The Board regularly discusses the risk exposures, if any, involved in the reports and recommendations of the Committees, as necessary.
ü
Robust Board oversight over the Company's political and lobbying expenditures and related public reporting
ü
Proxy access
Our Bylaws permit qualifying stockholders or groups of qualifying stockholders who have continuously owned at least 3% of the Company’s common stock ("Common Stock") for at least three consecutive years to use management’s proxy materials to nominate a number of director candidates not to exceed the greater of two or 20% of the number of directors then in office, subject to reduction in certain circumstances.
1 Tenure calculations as of April 26, 2024.
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50%

of director nominees added since the beginning of 2021

100%

attendance by incumbent directors at Board and Committee meetings in 2023

25

total Board and Committee meetings in 2023

9 out of 10

director nominees are independent*

6 years

average tenure of director nominees
*Independence determination made as of the filing date of this Proxy Statement under NYSE Independence Standards in effect at that time.


Selection of Directors
The Nominating and Governance Committee, in coordination with the Board, identifies, evaluates and recommends candidates to fill Board vacancies or to stand for election or re-election to the Board by the Company’s stockholders. The Nominating and Governance Committee considers a number of factors, and assesses the overall mix of qualifications, individual characteristics, experience level, and diverse perspectives and skills that are beneficial to our Company. The Nominating and Governance Committee also seeks to ensure an appropriate mix of tenures of the directors, taking into account the benefits of having longer-tenured directors in providing valuable historical knowledge and greater Board stability and ensuring continuity, as well as the benefits of having newer directors who can provide fresh perspectives and viewpoints. Management and independent members of the Board, as part of the Company's year-round engagement program, regularly seek input from stockholders regarding the Board's mix of skills, experience, expertise and tenure to further support Board refreshment and the Board's independent oversight of the Company.
Stockholder Director Recommendations
The Nominating and Governance Committee will consider director candidates recommended by stockholders upon submission in writing to our Corporate Secretary of the names and qualifications of such candidates at the following address: Corporate Secretary, DaVita Inc., 2000 16th Street, Denver, Colorado 80202. The Nominating and Governance Committee will evaluate candidates based on the same criteria described above, regardless of whether the candidate was recommended by the Company or a stockholder.
Board Diversity
Our Board values diversity, taking into consideration not only racial, ethnic and gender diversity, but also the mix of tenure, experience levels and types of experience, including both industry and subject matter expertise. We believe that a board that collectively reflects a diversity of background, thought and experience enhances a board's effectiveness.

The Board has codified a formal Board diversity policy (“Diversity Policy”) within the Company’s Guidelines that supports its endeavors to maintain a diverse Board representing a range of experiences in areas that are relevant to the Company’s strategy and business. Consistent with the Diversity Policy, and in conjunction with the Board selection and nomination process, the Nominating and Governance Committee considers the overall mix of qualifications, individual characteristics, experience levels, types of experience, including both industry and subject matter expertise, and diversity of gender, race and ethnicity, nationality, country of origin or cultural background as well as perspectives and skills that it believes would be most beneficial to the Company. Pursuant to the Company's Guidelines, if, at any point, the combined gender and ethnic/racial diversity of the Board falls below 50%, then at least two of the director nominee candidates considered by the Nominating and Governance Committee to fill any newly-created director position or director vacancy shall be members of an under-represented group.

9




The Nominating and Governance Committee assesses the effectiveness of the Diversity Policy annually by, among other things, evaluating the diversity of the candidates presented as a percentage of the total candidates presented, as well as whether an open Board position is in fact filled by a diverse candidate.

Majority of Our Board Leaders are Gender Diverse*
Pamela Arway
Independent Board Chair
Barbara Desoer
Chair, Compensation Committee
Gregory J. Moore, MD, Ph.D.
Chair, Compliance & Quality Committee
Jason M. Hollar
Chair, Audit Committee
Phyllis Yale
Chair, Nominating & Governance Committee
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*As of April 26, 2024.


In addition to the majority of our board leadership positions being held by gender diverse directors, 60% of our director nominees are diverse based on gender and/or race/ethnicity.*
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*Director Nominees Diversity calculations are as of April 26, 2024.
**Based on gender and racial/ethnic diversity.
Director Nominees Skills
The following skills matrix summarizes some of the key skills and experience represented by the director nominees as of April 26, 2024. The matrix represents some of the key skills, experiences and backgrounds that the Board has identified as particularly valuable to the oversight of the Company and illustrates how the current directors individually and collectively represent these key competencies and backgrounds. While all of these qualifications were considered in this year’s director nomination process, the matrix does not encompass all of the skills, experience, qualifications and attributes of the director nominees. The Board believes that its highly qualified director nominees provide the Board with a diverse set of skills, experience and perspectives necessary for effective oversight. Additional details of each director nominee's competencies are included in each director's profile under the section titled "— Biographies of our Director Nominees."
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Corporate Governance
Director Skills and Diversity Matrix
Strategic Initiatives / M&ARisk MgmtFinance / Capital
Mgmt / Accounting
Tech / Digital
 Transf /
 Cyber
Gov't / Regulatory /
 Public Policy
Healthcare Provider /
Payor
Human Capital
Mgmt / Comp
Gender Identity*Racial / Ethnic Identity*
Pamela M. Arway
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££££FC
Charles G. Berg
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££££££MC
Barbara J. Desoer
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£££££FC
Jason M. Hollar
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£££££MC
Gregory J. Moore
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££££MC
Dennis W. Pullin
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££££££MB
Javier J. Rodriguez
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££££££MH
Adam H. Schechter
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£££££££MC
Wendy L. Schoppert
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£££££FC
Phyllis R. Yale
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£££££FC
F= Female; M= Male
C= Caucasian; B=Black or African American; H=Hispanic or Latinx

*As self-identified by each director nominee.
11




Annual Board and Committee Evaluations
The Board is committed to continuous improvement and annual self-evaluations are an important tool to that end. Our Board and Committee evaluation process includes both written questionnaires and live interviews with directors on a rotating cycle, an overview of which is set forth below.
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Rotating cycle with anonymous written evaluations each year and live interviews with each director every other year, which includes individual director evaluations.
 
Process is overseen by the Nominating and Governance Committee.
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Directors provide feedback regarding performance and effectiveness of the Board and its Committees, the Chair and, every other year, individual director performance.
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The Board reviews the results of these evaluations in executive session.
 
The Chair of the Board speaks with each director for one-on-one discussion, as appropriate.
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Follow-up items are addressed at subsequent Board or Committee meetings, as appropriate, and Committee actions are reported back to the full Board.

The Nominating and Governance Committee considers the effectiveness of the self-evaluation process on an annual basis.

Director Independence
Under the listing standards of the NYSE, a majority of the members of the Board must satisfy the NYSE Independence Standards. In addition, the Company's Guidelines require that at least two-thirds of the members of the Board satisfy the NYSE Independence Standards and certain additional independence standards discussed in detail below and included in the Company's Guidelines (the "Additional Independence Standards" and, together with the NYSE Independence Standards, the "Company Independence Standards").

Under the Additional Independence Standards, a director is deemed not independent if (i) within the last four calendar years, (a) the director was an employee of the Company or one of its wholly-owned subsidiaries or (b) an immediate family member of the director was an executive officer of the Company, (ii) the director, during the current calendar year or any of the three immediately preceding years, has been paid by the Company more than $120,000 in compensation for services, other than for services rendered as a director, or (iii) the director is employed as an executive officer of another public company on whose board of directors any of the Company’s current executive officers serve.
The Board evaluates the independence of our directors annually and will review the independence of individual directors on an interim basis, as needed, to consider changes in employment, relationships and other factors. The Board evaluates the nature of any executive officer’s or director’s personal investment interest in director-affiliated entities (active or passive), the level of involvement by the director or executive officer in any such director-affiliated
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Corporate Governance
entities, any special arrangements or relationships between the parties that would lead to a personal benefit, any personal benefits derived as a result of business relationships with the Company, any other personal benefit derived by any director or executive officer as a result of the disclosed relationships or any other relevant factors.
The Board has determined that (i) all of the director nominees, other than Mr. Rodriguez, are independent under the Company Independence Standards, and (ii) each other individual who served as a director at any time during 2023, was independent under the Company Independence Standards during the time of such service.
In making its determination, the Board considered the Company’s commercial relationship with Cardinal, where Mr. Hollar serves as CEO and director, and the Company's commercial relationship with Labcorp, where Mr. Schechter serves as President, CEO and Chairman of the Board. After consideration of all relevant factors, including, among other things, that the Company's business with each of Cardinal and Labcorp was conducted in the ordinary course pursuant to arm's length negotiations that did not involve Messrs. Hollar and Schechter, respectively, and that the Company's relationship with each of Cardinal and Labcorp predated Messrs. Hollar's and Schechter's respective consideration for service on the Board, the Board determined that the Company’s commercial relationships with each of Cardinal and Labcorp did not present a conflict of interest and did not compromise the respective independence of Messrs. Hollar and Schechter.
Mr. Rodriguez is not deemed independent under the Company Independence Standards because he is employed as the Company's CEO.
Change in Status and Director Commitments
Our Guidelines require the Board to evaluate the appropriateness of a director’s continued service on the Board in the event that the director retires from his or her principal job, changes his or her principal job responsibility or experiences a significant event that could negatively affect his or her service to the Board. In such event, the Guidelines provide that the impacted director shall promptly tender his or her offer of resignation to the Board Chair for consideration by the other members of the Board. The members of the Board, excluding the impacted director, will determine whether such director’s continued service on the Board is in the best interests of our stockholders and will decide whether or not to accept the resignation of the director. The determination of whether a change in status has occurred is in the sole discretion of the Board.
In addition, the Guidelines provide that, prior to assuming additional commitments such as accepting an invitation to serve on the board of directors of another public company or other significant commitments involving affiliation with other for-profit businesses, non-profit entities or governmental units, a director should advise the Corporate Secretary or the Board Chair so that the remaining members of the Board may evaluate any potential conflicts of interest, including, without limitation, whether the proposed undertaking would result in excessive time commitments or an inability to fulfill their duties on the Board. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Guidelines provide that in no case may a director serve on more than four other public company boards of directors.
13




Leadership Structure and Meetings of Independent Directors
Pamela M. Arway, an independent director and member of the Board since May 2009, has served as the independent Board Chair since June 2020. The Board believes that Ms. Arway’s breadth of experience and the depth of knowledge gained during her career and her tenure on our Board are highly beneficial to the Board Chair role.
As the Board Chair, Ms. Arway:
Serves as the liaison between management and the independent directors
Approves meeting agendas and schedules for the Board
Presides at all meetings of the Board, including regularly-held executive sessions of independent directors
Facilitates discussions outside of scheduled Board meetings among the independent directors on key issues, as appropriate
May call meetings of the Board and the independent directors and, if requested by major stockholders, makes herself available for consultation and direct communication with them, as appropriate
Oversees the function of our Board Committees, each of which has an independent Chair
The Board believes that this leadership structure is appropriate for the Company at this time because it allows for independent oversight of management, increases management accountability, and facilitates an objective evaluation of management’s performance relative to compensation. The independent directors regularly evaluate the Board’s leadership structure, typically no less than on an annual basis.
Succession Planning
Management
The Board oversees management succession planning and the development of executive talent. The Board believes that management succession planning should be done in consultation with the CEO and that the full Board should have oversight of the succession planning process.
As part of this process, the CEO provides the Board with recommendations for potential successors for the position of CEO and other key senior management positions, and reviews development plans for such candidates with the Board. The Board engages directly with potential successor candidates and regularly reviews short-term, long-term and emergency succession plans for the CEO and other senior management positions.
Board
The Board also regularly considers its own composition, succession plans and refreshment efforts as part of the annual Board evaluation process described above. When considering director succession planning, the Nominating and Governance Committee and the Board take into account, among other things, stockholder feedback and the current and expected needs of the Board and the Company in light of the overall composition of the Board to achieve a balance of the skills, experience, diversity and tenure that are viewed to be essential to the Board’s oversight role.
Our Guidelines include a mandatory retirement age whereby a director who has reached the age of 75 shall not be nominated for re-election to our Board at the next Annual Meeting of Stockholders; however, the Nominating and Governance Committee may recommend, and the Board may approve, the nomination for re-election of a director at or after the age of 75, if, in light of all the circumstances, the Board determines it to be in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders. The Company’s Guidelines also support Board refreshment, and require that the average tenure of independent directors, as determined in accordance with the NYSE Independence Standards, shall not exceed 12 years.
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Corporate Governance
Environmental, Social and Governance Approach
We strive to be a community first and a company second, which is underscored by our deep-rooted commitment to our ESG practices and our Trilogy of Care - Caring for Our Patients, Caring for Each Other and Caring for Our World. Our ESG focus areas include how we care for our patients; how we support our teammates to grow and thrive in a workplace where everyone belongs; and how we engage with our local communities and promote environmental stewardship.
ESG Governance: The Nominating and Governance Committee oversees DaVita’s activities, policies and programs related to corporate, environmental and social responsibility. Our management ESG Steering Committee regularly reports to the Nominating and Governance Committee and also gives the full Board an ESG report on no less than an annual basis. Management periodically reports to the Audit Committee on the process for ESG-related public reporting, including reporting controls.
ESG Issues and Stakeholder Engagement: Based on feedback from key stakeholders and the metrics recommended by the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board ("SASB") for healthcare service providers, we have identified our key ESG issues and five focus areas:
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Quality of Care
Patient Experience
Patient Education
Health Equity

Diversity & Belonging
Teammate Development
The DaVita Way

Carbon Emissions Reduction
Water & Waste Reduction    

Charitable Giving
Volunteerism    

Compliance, Ethics & Governance
Data Privacy
Supply Chain
2025 ESG Goals: In 2021, we announced our goals in each of our five ESG focus areas for 2025, many of which are aspirational. The goals represent our ongoing commitment to meaningfully advance corporate citizenship initiatives. In the process of setting these goals, we worked with key stakeholders across the Company to determine objective metrics, leveraging external reporting frameworks, such as SASB, and science-based goals, when possible. While we recognize that it may be difficult to achieve some of these goals during the aspirational timeframe, we believe there is value in striving for these goals. Updates on our progress against these goals are available on our Community Care website at www.davitacommunitycare.com.1

External Recognition in 2023
Dow Jones Sustainability World Index: For six consecutive years, DaVita has been recognized by the Dow Jones Sustainability Indices for its performance in regard to select ESG criteria.
CDP (formerly known as Carbon Disclosure Project): DaVita discloses its Climate Change and Water Security impact(s) through CDP, a global non-profit that runs the world's leading environmental disclosure platform. DaVita is the only North American health care provider to receive a climate change score in the highest "Leadership" category, with a score of "A-" in 2023.
America's Climate Leaders: DaVita was recognized in USA Today's first-ever America's Climate Leaders list. The list recognizes U.S. companies that have demonstrated the greatest reduction in emission intensity.
The Sustainability Yearbook: DaVita is listed in the 2024 Sustainability Yearbook, which considered over 9,400 companies assessed in the 2023 Corporate Sustainability Assessment.
1 Website references throughout this Proxy Statement are provided for convenience only, and the content on the referenced websites is not incorporated by reference into this Proxy Statement.
15




2023 ESG Achievements
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8,000+ DaVita patients received a kidney transplant
37,000+ people participated in a Kidney Smart class, our no-cost kidney disease education program, which is available in over ten languages
More than half of our home dialysis patients are using a connected cycler, which allows clinical teams to review the results of their treatments from their home clinic, enabling more proactive care management in collaboration with patients' nephrologists
DaVita conducted unique health equity and social determinants of health pilot programs across the U.S. with focuses including transplant equity and community-based chronic kidney disease education
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49,000+ teammates are a part of DaVita's career pathways program, Clinical Ladders
2,300+ teammates were pursuing or received their nursing degree, funded by DaVita, as part of our Bridge to Your Dreams program
~60% of our Facility Administrators and managers have been promoted internally, as of December 31, 2023
Our overall U.S. teammate population comprised 78% women and 57% people of color as of December 31, 2023
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We achieved our first science-based target, reducing operational emissions for our global operations by 73% from a 2018 baseline
Our virtual power purchase agreements continue to produce enough renewable energy to power 100% of our U.S. operations
Our first net zero dialysis clinic is now operational
100 million+ gallons of water saved through water efficiency projects
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The 2023 DaVita Health Tour provided thousands of community members across the U.S. with free health screenings and education focused on kidney health
Through a sponsorship of the American Diabetes Association ("ADA"), DaVita and the ADA provided digital educational content aimed at helping those living with diabetes prevent and manage kidney disease
Through support from the DaVita Giving Foundation, the Food is Medicine Coalition provided 140,000+ medically tailored meals to people with food insecurity and medical nutrition needs, including individuals living with end stage kidney disease
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Corporate Governance
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We are one of the minority of companies in the S&P 500 to have a woman serving as the independent Board Chair,1 and 60% of our Board of Directors are women or people of color as of April 26, 2024.
99.9% of U.S. teammates and directors completed annual compliance training in 2023
Our 2023 Community Care Report will be available this spring at www.davitacommunitycare.com.
1 2023 Spencer Stuart U.S. Board Index
Ongoing Stockholder Outreach
The Company values its stockholders and their perspectives, and we regularly engage with our investors on a variety of topics. In particular, our ESG, corporate governance, Board composition, political spending disclosures, and executive compensation practices are each informed by ongoing dialogue with our stockholders. Our Board and management take a long-term view toward stockholder engagement, and as a result, we have maintained a practice of routinely meeting with our stockholders in a number of forums to encourage ongoing engagement.
Our Year-Round Stockholder Engagement Program
JULY - SEPTEMBER
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OCTOBER - JANUARY
Review and summarize feedback from prior Annual Meeting and determine next steps.

Prioritize post-Annual Meeting investor engagement focus areas.
Conduct meetings with our largest stockholders to inform reviews of our corporate governance, executive compensation and corporate responsibility and sustainability initiatives.

Share feedback with members of the Board for discussion and consideration.
MAY - JUNEFEBRUARY - APRIL
Ahead of Annual Meeting, conduct engagement with investors to answer any questions and obtain stockholder feedback on proxy matters.

Conduct Annual Meeting.
Consider feedback from engagement in designing our executive compensation program, corporate governance practices, Annual Meeting planning and corporate social responsibility and sustainability initiatives.
2023 - 2024 Stockholder Engagement
Following our 2023 Annual Meeting, we continued with our year-round engagement efforts to solicit feedback from stockholders. Among other things, we discussed ongoing Board refreshment, including the Board's mix of skills, experience, expertise and tenure, Board and Committee composition, our executive compensation program, key corporate governance related matters, corporate social responsibility and sustainability initiatives, workforce development and other human capital management practices, and the Company's political spending disclosures. The meetings included some combination of Pamela Arway, our independent Board Chair; Barbara Desoer, Chair of the Compensation Committee; Chief Legal and Public Affairs Officer ("CLO"); Group Vice President, Investor Relations and Capital Markets; Corporate Secretary; Group Vice President, Compensation; Chief Compliance Officer ("CCO"); and our ESG Director. Since our 2023 Annual Meeting, we have reached out to stockholders representing approximately 81% of shares of Common Stock outstanding. Some investors we contacted either did not respond or indicated that a discussion was not needed at that time. We had individual calls with stockholders representing approximately 46% of shares of Common Stock outstanding.1
1 Calculations relating to all stockholder outreach statistics were performed using stockholders of DaVita shares outstanding as of September 30, 2023.

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Key Items Discussed With Stockholders in 2023-2024
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Board Diversity and Related DisclosuresPay-for-Performance Environmental Sustainability Programs and Reporting
Board Skills, Tenure and Refreshment and Committee CompositionCEO Compensation and Executive Compensation Program DesignPolitical Spending Disclosures
Board Leadership and Succession PlanningWorkforce Development, Human Capital Management and Diversity and Belonging

Communications with the Board
Any interested party who desires to contact the Board Chair may do so by sending an email to independentchair@davita.com. In addition, any interested party who desires to contact the Board or any member(s) of the Board may do so by writing to: Board of Directors, c/o Corporate Secretary, DaVita Inc., 2000 16th Street, Denver, Colorado 80202. Copies of any such written communications received by the Corporate Secretary will be provided to the full Board or the appropriate member(s) unless they are considered, in the reasonable judgment of the Corporate Secretary, to be improper for submission to the intended recipient(s).
Annual Meeting of Stockholders Attendance
We do not have a policy requiring that directors attend the Annual Meeting of Stockholders. Our CEO and director, Javier Rodriguez, led the 2023 Annual Meeting, which was held virtually, and two additional members of the Board were also in attendance.
Information Regarding the Board and its Committees
The Board has established the following standing Committees: the Audit Committee, the Nominating and Governance Committee, the Compensation Committee, and the Compliance and Quality Committee. As required by the NYSE listing standards and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") rules, all members of the Audit Committee, the Nominating and Governance Committee, and the Compensation Committee are independent in accordance with the NYSE Independence Standards. All members of our Compliance and Quality Committee are also independent in accordance with the NYSE Independence Standards.

The Board met five times during 2023. Our incumbent directors attended 100% of all meetings of the Board and Board Committees on which they served that were held during the time they were a director in 2023.




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Notice of 2024 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement
18


Corporate Governance
Committees of the Board
The following sets forth our current Board Committees and membership, and describes certain key functions of each Committee of our Board. The charter for each of our Committees is available on the Corporate Governance section of our website, located at www.davita.com/about/corporate-governance.
Principal Functions of the Committee
AUDIT COMMITTEE
Jason M. Hollar, Chair
Barbara J. Desoer
Adam H. Schechter
Wendy L. Schoppert

Meetings in 2023: 8












Monitors and oversees the quality and integrity of our consolidated financial statements and related footnotes and other related disclosures
Oversees the independence, qualifications and performance of our independent registered public accounting firm, including a review of the scope and results of their audit, as well as the performance of our internal audit function
Appoints and engages our independent registered public accounting firm, and pre-approves the firm’s annual audit services, including related fees, audit-related services, and all other services in accordance with our pre-approval policy and rules and regulations promulgated by the SEC
Together with the Compliance and Quality Committee, assists the Board with oversight of compliance with legal and regulatory requirements
Oversees the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures and compliance with ethical standards
Oversees our policies and programs with respect to enterprise risk assessment and enterprise risk management, including the risks related to privacy and data security (including, for the avoidance of doubt, cybersecurity)
Oversees the process for determining our disclosure required with respect to cybersecurity incidents in the Company’s filings with the SEC
Provides an avenue of communication among the independent registered public accounting firm, management, internal audit department and the Board
Prepares the Audit Committee report required to be included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K or Proxy Statement
Considers related party transactions for approval, or recommends such approval by the disinterested members of the Board
Periodically reviews and discusses with management the Company’s emergency preparedness and disaster recovery plans and capabilities

All members of the Audit Committee are (a) “independent” under the NYSE Independence Standards and the NYSE’s heightened independence requirements for audit committee members and (b) “financially literate” under the listing standards of the NYSE. Each of Mr. Hollar and Ms. Schoppert qualifies as an “audit committee financial expert” within the meaning of SEC rules.
NOMINATING & GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE
Phyllis R. Yale, Chair
Pamela M. Arway
Charles G. Berg
Gregory M. Moore, M.D., Ph.D.
John M. Nehra*

Meetings in 2023: 4
Oversees the composition, structure, operation and evaluation of the Board and its Committees
Oversees the process for evaluating the independence, contribution and effectiveness of incumbent Board members
Oversees procedures for stockholders and other interested parties to communicate with the Board
Reviews and makes recommendations to the Board about our governance principles and policies, and monitors compliance with adopted principles and policies
In coordination with the Board, identifies, evaluates and recommends candidates for nomination, appointment or election to the Board and candidates to fill Board vacancies
Makes recommendations to the Board regarding the membership and chairs of the Committees of the Board
Reviews the Company’s activities, policies and programs related to environmental, sustainability and governance matters, including corporate environmental and social responsibility matters, with such review to include, among other things, considering the impact of such activities, policies and programs on the Company, its teammates and the communities in which it operates and the Company’s progress related to such activities, policies and programs
Oversees continuing education of the Board and orientation of new Board members to the Company and its business

All members of the Nominating and Governance Committee are “independent” under the NYSE Independence Standards.

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Principal Functions of the Committee
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
Barbara J. Desoer, Chair
Pamela M. Arway
John M. Nehra*
Adam H. Schechter
Meetings in 2023: 4
Establishes an executive compensation philosophy designed to be aligned with the Company's long-term interests and those of our stockholders
Reviews, as appropriate, feedback on the Company’s executive compensation program received through the Company’s stockholder outreach program and the results of any advisory stockholder votes on executive compensation and considers whether to recommend adjustments to the Company’s executive compensation policies and practices as a result of such feedback or voting results
Evaluates and approves compensation plans, programs and policies related to our executive officers
Annually reviews and approves the goals and objectives and summary performance of our executive officers other than the CEO, and makes compensation decisions that are aligned with the performance of each executive officer
Annually reviews and approves the annual and long-term corporate goals and objectives applicable to compensation for our CEO, evaluates our CEO’s performance in light of those goals and objectives, and determines and approves, subject to approval by the independent members of the Board, all elements of our CEO’s total compensation based on this evaluation
Oversees the administration by the Board of our equity or other incentive award plans, including the stock ownership requirements applicable to our CEO, senior executives and directors
Oversees the administration by the Board of our non-employee director compensation program to ensure that the Board is compensated in a competitive and fair manner, and that such compensation is aligned with the long-term interests of our stockholders
Reviews and discusses with management our annual Compensation Discussion and Analysis disclosures to determine whether to recommend to the Board that it be included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K and Proxy Statement
Has sole authority and discretion to retain or replace its independent compensation consultant, legal counsel and other advisors, and is directly responsible for hiring, overseeing and compensating such advisors
Oversees our compliance with SEC rules and regulations regarding stockholder approval of certain executive compensation matters
Oversees the Company's assessment of risk related to the Company's compensation plans, programs and policies
In coordination with the Board, and as a supplement to the Board’s oversight, periodically discusses reports from management regarding the development, implementation and effectiveness of the Company’s policies and strategies relating to its human capital management function
May form and delegate any responsibilities, including those described above, to a subcommittee of one or more Board members
All members of the Compensation Committee are (a) "independent" under the NYSE Independence Standards and the NYSE’s heightened independence requirements for compensation committee members and (b) “nonemployee directors” under Rule 16b-3 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”).
COMPLIANCE & QUALITY COMMITTEE
Gregory J. Moore, M.D., Ph.D., Chair
Charles G. Berg
Dennis W. Pullin
Wendy L. Schoppert
Phyllis R. Yale
Meetings in 2023: 4
Reviews and oversees compliance with applicable healthcare laws, regulations, and guidance governing the conduct of dialysis providers, including federal healthcare regulatory program requirements
Oversees and monitors the effectiveness of our healthcare regulatory compliance program, reviews healthcare regulatory compliance risk, and reviews the steps management is taking to monitor, control and report these risk exposures
Together with the Audit Committee, assists the Board with oversight of enterprise risk management and healthcare, legal, regulatory, and anti-corruption compliance
Has primary responsibility for oversight of healthcare regulatory compliance requirements and ensuring proper communication of healthcare regulatory compliance issues to the Board
Meets regularly in executive sessions with our CCO to discuss, among other things, our compliance program and to receive an update on compliance activities initiated or completed during the quarter
Assists the Board with the general oversight of the Company’s patient safety and clinical quality of care programs and monitors the Company’s performance in this regard
Reviews clinical quality, safety and clinical services metrics and priorities
Reviews processes relating to scientific, clinical and regulatory quality performance benchmarks
Meets regularly in executive session with the Chief Medical Officer to discuss, among other things, the clinical quality of care program and to receive an update on quality activities initiated or completed during the quarter
Remains informed regarding investigations of any complaints that raise material and substantiated concerns we are not complying with applicable laws or regulations related to healthcare program requirements, anti-corruption or patient safety
All members of the Compliance and Quality Committee are “independent” under the NYSE Independence Standards.

*Effective as of the Annual Meeting date, Mr. Nehra will retire from the Board and step down as a member of the Nominating and Governance Committee and the Compensation Committee.


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Notice of 2024 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement
20


Corporate Governance
Risk Oversight
Our Board oversees our enterprise-wide approach to risk management with a fundamental belief that the key components of risk management are:
Identifying potential risks that we face,
Assessing the likelihood and potential impact of the risks,
Adopting strategies and controls designed to manage the risks to be within an acceptable level,
Reporting on a regular basis regarding the assessment and management of the risks, and
Monitoring these potential risks on a regular basis.
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Our Enterprise Risk Management ("ERM") team leads this risk management process, and evaluates risks to the enterprise on short, intermediate and long-term bases. Our ERM team reports to our ERM Committee, a group comprised of members of senior management who meet on a regular basis to oversee the performance of these risk management functions. We assess risks using a probability-magnitude lens, with shorter and intermediate term risks generally given greater weight. We prioritize mitigating activities on shorter and intermediate term risks, but also use risk analyses and oversight to proactively incorporate mitigating activities into our long-term strategy. The ERM process reflects a Company-wide effort designed to identify, assess, manage, report and monitor enterprise risks and risk areas. This effort includes the Company's Enterprise Risk Services ("Internal Audit"), Sarbanes-Oxley ("SOX"), Compliance Audit, Legal and IT Security teams, among others.
In addition, the Company regularly retains outside advisors to advise on a range of strategic purposes, including for cybersecurity and privacy readiness assessments, quality assessment reviews, and compliance program evaluations, among other things.
As part of the ERM process:
Key leaders across the enterprise are interviewed to identify potential risks and assist with the monitoring of those identified risks;
The Audit Committee, which is composed of independent directors, oversees the Company's ERM program, and the Audit Committee and the Board each receive and discuss ERM reports on a regular basis, with the Audit Committee receiving ERM reports quarterly and the full Board generally receiving such reports no less than annually;
The Compliance and Quality Committee, which is composed of independent directors, oversees the Company's processes to identify and seek to mitigate clinical, legal, and compliance enterprise risks; and
The Audit Committee and Compliance and Quality Committee each meet regularly with our CLO and CCO in connection with fulfilling these responsibilities.
The ERM process is incorporated into our disclosure controls and procedures. Representatives of each of our ERM, Legal, Internal Audit and Compliance Audit teams sit on the Company’s management Disclosure Committee, which is responsible for, among other things, the design and establishment of disclosure controls and procedures to help ensure the timeliness, accuracy and completeness of our corporate disclosure. The aforementioned interviews with key leaders across the enterprise are administered by the Disclosure Committee on a quarterly basis.
21




Privacy, Data and Cybersecurity

With respect to assessing privacy, data and cybersecurity risks, the Company adopts a hybrid approach that primarily aligns with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (“NIST”) Cybersecurity Framework, including the guidance set forth in the NIST HIPAA Security Rule Cybersecurity Guide, while also evaluating against certain elements of the ISO 27001 and 27005 standards that management believes provide additional levels of guidance or structure. We regularly evaluate the Company’s cybersecurity and privacy processes and procedures, both through regular audits by our Internal Audit and IT security teams, as well as regular retention of outside advisors under the direction of our IT security team. Among other things, in recent years we have conducted an external third party review at least every two years that evaluates the readiness of the entire Company against the NIST Cybersecurity Framework and provides an assessment that measures Capability Maturity Model Integration levels.

As part of its oversight responsibilities, the Audit Committee monitors privacy, data and cyber security as specific risk areas and regularly reports to the Board on these topics. Three of our Board members, Mr. Schechter, Dr. Moore and Ms. Schoppert, with Mr. Schechter and Ms. Schoppert members of the Audit Committee, hold a CERT Certificate in Cybersecurity Oversight. For information regarding our other directors with expertise in technology and cybersecurity matters, please see the section titled "Corporate Governance—Director Skills and Diversity Matrix" above.

As part of that oversight function:

The Audit Committee reviews and discusses privacy, data and cybersecurity risk exposures with management, and generally receives reports on these risks from the ERM team and the Chief Information Officer ("CIO") or their respective designees on a quarterly basis;

These reports to the Audit Committee include reports on external and internal audits of information security matters, which are conducted regularly;

The Company’s Privacy Office creates, updates and implements policies and procedures that are designed to comply with privacy laws and requirements in the countries in which we do business;

The Privacy Office, with the assistance of Internal Audit and the CIO, also assesses the nature and severity of privacy risks within DaVita and takes steps to help mitigate such risks;

The Chief Privacy Officer, or the CLO, periodically updates the Audit Committee on the status of the privacy program;

Internal Audit provides copies of the results of any privacy, data or cybersecurity audits to the Audit Committee, and reports to the Audit Committee on these results as appropriate; and

The Company incorporates privacy, data and cybersecurity topics into its annual compliance training materials that are required for all teammates and new hires.

The identification and evaluation of cybersecurity threats and risks is integrated into our ERM process. For more information on the Company’s privacy, data and cybersecurity risk management program, please refer to Part I, Item 1C, “Cybersecurity” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023.
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Notice of 2024 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement
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Corporate Governance
In addition, the Committees of the Board are structured to oversee other specific risks, as follows:
BOARD
The Board regularly receives reports from each of its Committees, which provide detail on risk management issues and management's response. The Board discusses the risk exposures, if any, involved in the reports or recommendations of the Committees, as necessary. Additionally, the Board oversees the Company’s Policy Related to Political and Lobbying Expenditures, its public policy priorities and advocacy efforts, and the assessment of any potential risks related to the Company’s political spending.
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
Oversees our compensation policies and practices, including whether such policies and practices balance risk-taking and rewards in an appropriate manner as discussed further below. In coordination with the Board, and as a supplement to the Board’s oversight, the Compensation Committee also helps oversee human capital management, including the Company’s policies and strategies relating to recruiting, retention, career development and progression, teammate engagement, diversity, belonging, employment practices and culture.
COMPLIANCE & QUALITY COMMITTEE
Oversees non-financial compliance risk, including that associated with healthcare and anti-corruption-related requirements.

Oversees the Company's compliance programs inclusive of its policies and procedures, training / education, auditing and monitoring, responses to detected deficiencies, enforcement of disciplinary standards and overall culture of compliance.

Oversees development and implementation of practices, policies and procedures designed to optimize quality and safety of care.
AUDIT COMMITTEE
Oversees the financial reporting process, the system of internal control over financial reporting, the audit process and, in coordination with the Compliance and Quality Committee, the Company's process for monitoring compliance with laws and regulations.

Receives reports at each regular meeting from (i) our external auditor on the status of audit activities and findings; (ii) the executive responsible for Internal Audit (who reports to the Audit Committee) on the status of the Internal Audit plan, audit results and any corrective action taken in response to audit findings; and (iii) our CLO on matters related to compliance with laws and regulations and ongoing legal matters.

The ERM Committee provides regular reports to the Audit Committee. The ESG Steering Committee provides the Audit Committee with regular reports related to disclosure controls and procedures for ESG reporting.

Oversees the Company's Code of Ethics, and risks related to privacy, data and cybersecurity.
NOMINATING & GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE
Oversees the assessment of the Board's composition and structure, and each member of the Board's independence, as well as the effectiveness of our Corporate Governance Guidelines.

Reviews the Company’s activities, policies and programs related to environmental, sustainability and governance matters, including corporate environmental and social responsibility matters, with such review to include, among other things, the impact of such activities, policies and programs on the Company, its teammates and the communities in which it operates.

23




Non-Employee Director Share Ownership Policy
Our Share Ownership Policy for non-employee directors is designed to encourage non-employee directors to acquire and maintain a meaningful financial interest in the Company’s Common Stock over time to enhance and maintain alignment with our stockholders' interests. Shares owned directly are included in the determination of whether established guidelines have been met. Any 'in-the-money' value of shares underlying vested but unexercised equity awards is not included in this determination. The total net realizable share value retained (the "Ownership Threshold") must have a market value (as defined in the policy) exceeds the lesser of:
25% of the total pretax equity award value realized by the Board member from the time the Board member becomes subject to the policy to date in excess of $100,000; and
Five times the annual Board cash retainer which for 2023 was $100,000, or $500,000.
Directors who have not achieved their applicable Ownership Threshold are required to retain future acquired shares until the Ownership Threshold is met, subject to certain limited exceptions. As of December 31, 2023, all of our non-employee directors were in compliance with the Ownership Threshold. See the section titled “Compensation Discussion and Analysis — Share Ownership Requirements” for information regarding the share ownership policy applicable to management.
Code of Ethics and Code of Conduct
We have a Code of Ethics that applies to our CEO, CFO, Chief Accounting Officer ("CAO"), CLO and all professionals involved in the accounting and financial reporting functions. We also have a Code of Conduct that applies to all of our teammates, officers, the Board, physician partners, and third parties conducting business on behalf of the Company. The Code of Ethics and the Code of Conduct are each available under the Corporate Governance section of our website, located at www.davita.com/about/corporate-governance. If the Company amends or waives the Code of Ethics or the Code of Conduct with respect to our CEO, CFO, CAO, CLO, or persons performing similar functions, we will disclose the amendment or waiver at the same location on our website.
Insider Trading Policy
We have adopted an Insider Trading Policy applicable to our directors, executive officers and other teammates that prohibits the violation of the U.S. securities laws by transacting in our Common Stock, other Company securities or the securities of other companies, while in the possession of material non-public information.
Under our Insider Trading Policy, except in accordance with approved trading plans adopted pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 10b5-1, pre-clearance by our CLO is required for equity and certain benefit plan transactions entered into by our executive officers, Board members and certain other senior-level teammates.
In addition, quarterly trading blackouts are imposed under the Insider Trading Policy upon our directors, executive officers and certain other teammates who are deemed to have access to the Company’s financial results prior to their becoming final and being publicly disclosed. The Insider Trading Policy also permits the Company to institute additional trading blackout periods or other pre-clearance requirements, as deemed appropriate.
Hedging and Pledging
The Insider Trading Policy restricts certain other lawful conduct that may not be aligned with our stockholders’ best interest. For example, the Insider Trading Policy prohibits hedging transactions for all those subject to the policy, which includes all directors, executive officers and DaVita teammates and restricts pledging transactions by our directors, executive officers and all other teammates at the vice president level and above.
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Notice of 2024 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement
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Proposal 2 Ratification of the Appointment of our Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
The Audit Committee has appointed KPMG LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2024. Representatives of KPMG LLP are expected to attend the Annual Meeting virtually and will be available to respond to appropriate questions and to make a statement if they so desire. If KPMG LLP should decline to act or otherwise become incapable of acting, or if KPMG LLP’s engagement is discontinued for any reason, the Audit Committee will appoint another independent registered public accounting firm to serve for fiscal year 2024. Although we are not required to seek stockholder ratification of this appointment, the Board believes that doing so is consistent with corporate governance best practices. If the appointment is not ratified, the Audit Committee will explore the reasons for the unfavorable vote and will reconsider the appointment.
The Audit Committee and the Board recommend a vote FOR the ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for fiscal year 2024.
The following table sets forth the aggregate professional fees billed to us for the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022 by KPMG LLP:
20232022
Audit fees1
$4,659,283$4,980,316
Audit-related fees2
$615,000$572,703
Tax fees3
$2,328,602$2,196,097
All other fees
Total$7,602,885$7,749,116
1Includes aggregate fees for the audit of our consolidated financial statements and the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting included in our Form 10-K and the three quarterly reviews of our condensed consolidated financial statements included in our Form 10-Qs and other SEC filings. In addition, audit fees include statutory audits in several countries outside of the U.S. where we conduct operations through our international subsidiaries and joint ventures.
2Includes fees for assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of our financial statements and are not reported as “Audit Fees.” The audit-related fees in 2023 and 2022 include fees for an audit of a majority-owned entity and other domestic audits not related to the consolidated financial statements. The audit-related fees for 2022 also include fees for due diligence services relating to potential acquisitions being considered at that time.
3Includes fees for professional services rendered for tax compliance totaling $2,093,011 and $2,111,992 for 2023 and 2022, respectively, with the remainder primarily for technical tax advice.
Pre-approval Policies and Procedures
Under its pre-approval policy, the Audit Committee is required to pre-approve the audit, audit-related, tax and all other services provided by KPMG LLP, in order to ensure that the provision of such services does not impair the auditor’s independence. The Audit Committee pre-approved all such services in 2023 and concluded that such services performed by KPMG LLP were compatible with the maintenance of that firm’s independence in the conduct of its auditing functions.
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Proposal 3 Advisory Vote to Approve Named Executive Officer Compensation
As required by Section 14A of the Exchange Act, we are providing stockholders with a proposal to approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of our named executive officers ("NEOs") as disclosed in this Proxy Statement in accordance with SEC rules, commonly referred to as a “say-on-pay" vote.
Since the first say-on-pay vote of stockholders at our 2011 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, we have held a say-on-pay vote annually and in 2023, our stockholders voted in favor of maintaining this "annual" frequency. Accordingly, following the say-on-pay vote at our 2024 Annual Meeting, the next say-on-pay vote will be held at our 2025 Annual Meeting.
We believe that our executive compensation program is reasonable, competitive and strongly focused on pay-for-performance principles. Our executive compensation program is designed to align the interests of our executives with the short- and long-term interests of our stockholders. Our incentive criteria focus on performance-based compensation that aligns with strategic, operational and financial objectives that we believe support the creation of long-term stockholder value. See the section entitled "Compensation Discussion and Analysis — Overview — Our Executive Compensation Structure" below for details.
This proposal gives our stockholders the opportunity to express their views on the overall compensation of our NEOs and the compensation philosophy, policies and practices described in this Proxy Statement.
For the reasons discussed above and as further described in the "Compensation Discussion and Analysis" section of this Proxy Statement, we are asking our stockholders to indicate their support for our NEO compensation by voting FOR the following resolution at the Annual Meeting:
“RESOLVED, that the Company’s stockholders approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of the NEOs, as disclosed in this Proxy Statement pursuant to the compensation disclosure rules of the SEC (which disclosure includes the sections titled "Compensation Discussion and Analysis," "Executive Compensation — 2023 Summary Compensation Table" and the other related tables and disclosure).”
The say-on-pay vote is an advisory vote only, and therefore it will not bind the Company or the Board. However, the Board and the Compensation Committee will consider the voting results, as appropriate, when making future decisions regarding executive compensation, as they did following the 2023 Annual Meeting and each Annual Meeting of Stockholders since 2011.

The Board recommends a vote FOR the approval of the advisory resolution relating to the compensation of our NEOs as disclosed
in this Proxy Statement.
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Notice of 2024 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement
26


Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial
Owners and Management
The following table sets forth information regarding the ownership of our Common Stock as of March 31, 2024 (except as noted) by (a) all persons known by us to own beneficially more than 5% of our Common Stock, (b) each of our directors and NEOs, and (c) all of our directors and executive officers as a group. We know of no agreements among our stockholders that relate to voting or investment power over our Common Stock or any arrangement that may at a subsequent date result in a change of control of the Company.
Name and address of beneficial owner1
Number of
shares
beneficially
owned
Percentage of
 shares
beneficially
owned
Warren E. Buffett2
Berkshire Hathaway Inc.
3555 Farnam St.
Omaha, NE 68131
 
36,095,570 41.2 %
The Vanguard Group3
100 Vanguard Blvd.
Malvern, PA 19355
 
6,320,740 7.2 %
BlackRock, Inc.4
50 Hudson Yards
New York, NY 10001
 
4,790,419 5.5 %
Directors and Executive Officers:  
Javier J. Rodriguez5
1,085,584 1.2 %
Joel Ackerman6
181,045 *
Michael D. Staffieri7
261,765 *
Kathleen A. Waters8
72,985 *
James O. Hearty9
14,719 *
Pamela M. Arway23,878 *
Charles G. Berg25,324 *
Barbara J. Desoer15,984 *
Jason M. Hollar3,538 *
Gregory J. Moore, M.D., Ph.D.4,746 *
John M. Nehra78,259 *
Dennis W. Pullin— *
Adam H. Schechter2,625 *
Wendy L. Schoppert820 *
Phyllis R. Yale14,996 *
All directors and executive officers as a group (16 persons)10
1,786,268 2.0 %
*    Amount represents less than 1% of our Common Stock.
1Unless otherwise set forth in the table above, the address of each beneficial owner is 2000 16th Street, Denver, Colorado, 80202.
2Based solely on information contained in Amendment No. 10 to Schedule 13D filed with the SEC on February 16, 2024, by Berkshire Hathaway Inc., a diversified holding company which Mr. Buffett may be deemed to control. Such filings indicated that, as of February 14, 2024, Mr. Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway Inc. shared voting and dispositive power over 36,095,570 shares of the Company’s Common Stock, which included shares beneficially owned by certain subsidiaries of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. as a result of being a parent holding company or control person. The percentage of shares beneficially owned as reported for Mr. Buffett was calculated by the Company as of March 31, 2024, using the total shares outstanding as of that date.
3Based solely upon information contained in Amendment No. 13 to Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on February 13, 2024, as of December 29, 2023, The Vanguard Group has shared voting power with respect to 72,357 shares, sole dispositive power with respect to
27











6,085,762 shares and shared dispositive power with respect to 234,978 shares. The percentage of shares beneficially owned as reported for The Vanguard Group was calculated by the Company as of March 31, 2024, using the total shares outstanding as of that date.
4Based solely upon information contained in Amendment No. 8 to Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on January 31, 2024, as of December 31, 2023, BlackRock, Inc., an investment advisor, has sole voting power with respect to 4,275,385 shares and sole dispositive power with respect to 4,790,419 shares. The percentage of shares beneficially owned as reported for BlackRock, Inc. was calculated by the Company as of March 31, 2024, using the total shares outstanding as of that date.
5Includes 381,655 shares issuable upon the exercise of Stock-Settled Appreciation Rights ("SSARs"), which are exercisable as of March 31, 2024, as determined based on the closing price per share of our Common Stock of $138.05 on March 28, 2024 (the last trading day immediately prior to March 31, 2024).
6Includes 40,184 shares issuable upon the exercise of SSARs, which are exercisable as of March 31, 2024, as determined based on the closing price per share of our Common Stock of $138.05 on March 28, 2024 (the last trading day immediately prior to March 31, 2024).
7Includes 60,276 shares issuable upon the exercise of SSARs, which are exercisable as of March 31, 2024, as determined based on the closing price per share of our Common Stock of $138.05 on March 28, 2024 (the last trading day immediately prior to March 31, 2024).
8Includes 13,550 shares issuable upon the exercise of SSARs, which are exercisable as of March 31, 2024, as determined based on the closing price per share of our Common Stock of $138.05 on March 28, 2024 (the last trading day immediately prior to March 31, 2024).
9Includes 2,693 shares issuable upon the exercise of SSARs, which are exercisable as of March 31, 2024, as determined based on the closing price per share of our Common Stock of $138.05 on March 28, 2024 (the last trading day immediately prior to March 31, 2024).
10Includes 498,358 shares issuable upon the exercise of SSARs, which are exercisable as of March 31, 2024, as determined based on the closing price per share of our Common Stock of $138.05 on March 28, 2024 (the last trading day immediately prior to March 31, 2024).

Delinquent Section 16(a) Reports
Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires “insiders,” including our executive officers, directors and beneficial owners of more than 10% of our Common Stock, to file reports of ownership and changes in ownership of our Common Stock with the SEC. Based solely on our review of the copies of such forms filed with the SEC, or written representations from reporting persons, we believe that our insiders complied with all applicable Section 16(a) filing requirements during 2023, except that one Form 4 with respect to two vesting transactions for John Winstel, the Company's former Chief Accounting Officer, was inadvertently filed late due to an administrative error by the Company.
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Information About Our Executive Officers
Information About Our Executive Officers
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Javier J. Rodriguez, 53
Chief Executive Officer
Joel Ackerman, 58
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
Michael D. Staffieri, 50
Chief Operating Officer, DaVita Kidney Care
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Christopher Berry, 49
Chief Accounting Officer
Kathleen A. Waters, 56
Chief Legal and Public Affairs Officer
James O. Hearty, 55
Chief Compliance Officer
Set forth below is a brief description of the business experience of all executive officers other than Mr. Rodriguez, who is also a director nominee and whose business experience is set forth above in the section of this Proxy Statement titled “Biographies of our Director Nominees."

Joel Ackerman became our CFO in February 2017. Effective April 2019, Mr. Ackerman was also appointed to serve as our Treasurer. Prior to joining us, Mr. Ackerman was the CEO and a member of the Board of Directors of Champions Oncology, Inc., a publicly traded company engaged in the development of advanced technology solutions and services to personalize the development and use of oncology drugs, since October 2010. Mr. Ackerman is currently the Chairman of the Board of Champions Oncology. Mr. Ackerman served as a Managing Director at Warburg Pincus, a global private equity firm, where he led the healthcare services team for nearly 10 years from January 1999 to September 2008. He served on the Board of Directors at Kindred Healthcare, Inc., a healthcare services company, from December 2008 to July 2018 and served on the Board of Directors of Coventry Health Care, Inc., a national managed care company, from September 1999 until its acquisition by Aetna Inc. in May 2013. Mr. Ackerman is also a member of the Board of One Acre Fund, a not-for-profit organization that focuses on smallholder agriculture, serving more than 3,000,000 subsistence farmers in Africa.

Michael D. Staffieri became our COO, DaVita Kidney Care, in March 2014. From July 2011 to March 2014, he served as a Senior Vice President, Kidney Care. Mr. Staffieri initially joined us in July 2000 and served in several different roles since that time, including as our Vice President of Operations and New Center Development from March 2008 to July 2011. Prior to joining us, Mr. Staffieri worked as a consultant for Arthur Andersen LLP from 1999 to 2000.



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Information About Our Executive Officers

Christopher Berry joined DaVita as Group Vice President, Accounting in August 2023 and became our CAO in September 2023. Mr. Berry was the Senior Vice President and CAO at Sonder Holdings Inc. (“Sonder”), a publicly traded hospitality company, from August 2022 to August 2023. He also previously served as Sonder’s Interim Principal Financial Officer from January 2023 to March 2023. Prior to joining Sonder, Mr. Berry held various roles at Alaska Air Group, Inc., a publicly traded airline holding company, serving as Vice President, Corporate Controller, and CAO from February 2017 to April 2022, Managing Director of Accounting, Corporate Controller and Principal Accounting Officer from February 2014 to February 2017, Managing Director, Investor Relations from October 2010 to February 2014, and Director, Financial Reporting and Accounting from March 2005 to October 2010.
Kathleen A. Waters became our CLO in May 2016, overseeing all legal and regulatory functions for the enterprise. In February 2021, Ms. Waters became our Chief Legal and Public Affairs Officer as she also took over responsibility for federal government affairs. Prior to joining the Company, Ms. Waters was Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of Health Net, Inc., a publicly traded managed care organization, from 2015 to 2016. Prior to Health Net, Inc., Ms. Waters was a Partner in Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP’s litigation practice from 2003 to 2015, where she was the co-chair of the healthcare group. Prior to Morgan Lewis, Ms. Waters was in private practice at various law firms since 1994.

James O. Hearty became our enterprise CCO in March 2018. From September 2015 to March 2018, he served as our Senior Vice President and CCO - Kidney Care, and, prior to that, from February 2012 to August 2015, he served as Vice President, Associate General Counsel. Prior to joining us, he was a prosecutor and trial attorney with the U.S. Department of Justice ("DOJ") for 14 years. He started in the Civil Division of the DOJ in Washington D.C. and four years later became an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado. Mr. Hearty held several leadership positions at the U.S. Attorney’s Office, including Deputy Chief of the criminal division. Mr. Hearty also serves on the board of Urban Peak, a Denver non-profit that serves youth experiencing homelessness.

None of the executive officers has any family relationship with any other executive officer or with any of our directors.
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Compensation Discussion
and Analysis

Table of Contents
31


Compensation Discussion and Analysis
This Compensation Discussion and Analysis (the “CD&A”) describes our executive compensation program for the following NEOs:
NEOTITLE
Javier J. RodriguezChief Executive Officer
Joel AckermanChief Financial Officer and Treasurer
Michael D. StaffieriChief Operating Officer, DaVita Kidney Care
Kathleen A. WatersChief Legal and Public Affairs Officer
James O. HeartyChief Compliance Officer
Overview
DaVita's Operational and Financial Highlights

DaVita's performance for 2023 highlighted the resilience of our business and the benefit of continued long-term investment in our platform. We focused on creating stockholder value, and our performance was driven by strong operations within our core business combined with an improving macro landscape. Operating highlights for 2023 include the following:
U.S. dialysis revenue growth of 3.2% primarily driven by an increase in average patient services revenue per treatment of $12.20
Operating income of $1,603 million and adjusted operating income1 of $1,734 million (with 20% year-over-year growth, in each case)
Operating cash flows of $2,059 million and free cash flows2 of $1,236 million (with 32% and 51% year-over-year growth, respectively)
Repurchase of 2,903,832 shares of our Common Stock for aggregate consideration of $286 million, and a 1.8% reduction in our share count year-over-year
Entry into a new Term Loan A-1 facility in the aggregate principal amount of $1,250 million and a revolving line of credit in an aggregate principal amount of up to $1,500 million and purchase of $4,500 million notional amount of forward caps to help mitigate our exposure to significant interest rate increases through 2026
Leverage ratio, as a multiple of Consolidated EBITDA, each as defined by our credit agreement, was back within our target range of 3.0x to 3.5x as of December 31, 2023
After a declining census due to COVID-19, a return to growth of our patient population with a net increase in U.S. dialysis patients of 0.7% and international patients of 8.4% as of December 31, 2023
Continued patient growth in Integrated Kidney Care ("IKC") to 58,000 patients in risk-based integrated care arrangements and an additional 17,000 patients in other integrated care arrangements
Invested in Mozarc Medical Holding LLC, an independent new company committed to reshaping kidney health and driving patient-centered technology solutions

1 "Adjusted Operating Income" is a non-GAAP financial measure that represents operating income, excluding certain items which we do not believe are indicative of our ordinary results of operations. Please see Annex A for a presentation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures.
2 "Free Cash Flow" is a non-GAAP financial measure that represents net cash provided by operating activities less distributions to noncontrolling interests and all capital expenditures (including development capital expenditures, routine maintenance and information technology), plus contributions from noncontrolling interests and proceeds from the sale of self-developed properties. Please see Annex A for a presentation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures.
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Compensation Principles
Our objective is to design an executive compensation program that emphasizes performance and aligns our executive officers' interests with those of our stockholders, including with relation to both financial and ESG performance. We have supported this objective by designing our executive compensation program around the following principles:
Compensation Principles
Performance Orientation
Majority of compensation for NEOs is tied to “performance” and not just continued service
Multiple criteria in the Company's 2023 short-term incentive program ("STI Program") and long-term incentive program ("LTI Program") to mitigate risks associated with setting performance criteria in advance and to capture varying performance periods
LTI Program performance measured over a three-year period, emphasizing cumulative and sustained performance over the multi-year performance period
Compensation Committee generally retains ability to exercise negative discretion under STI Program
Metrics are Linked to Strategy
75% of PSUs under the LTI Program in recent years are tied to a long-term earnings per share ("EPS") target, which we believe focuses our NEOs on capital-efficient growth, the hallmark of our long-term strategy
CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award was designed to incentivize our CEO to make investment and operational decisions in the face of an evolving strategy and rewards him for maximizing long-term stockholder value, and at the same time would not pay out if he was not able to implement strategies that increased long-term stockholder value as reflected in a sustained stock price increase from the date the Board approved the grant
We also include certain strategic goals that are viewed as important for both near-term operational success and long-term value creating metrics, including ESG-related goals. For example, our STI Program includes metrics related to home modalities penetration, patient engagement, teammate engagement and water savings, which together comprise 21% of the total STI Program opportunity
Link to ESG Metrics
As noted above, ESG goals are part of the Company's business strategy. The 2023 STI Program explicitly carves out 21% of the annual target opportunity to be based on ESG criteria, formulaically evaluated, with another 9% tied to strategic objectives for each individual NEO, and which may also include ESG goals specific to the individual NEO's areas of responsibility
Outperformance Required for Target Payouts
In the 2023 STI Program, performance had to be at or above the midpoint of our initial guidance range for 2023 adjusted operating income and 2023 free cash flow to achieve target payout for the corresponding metrics
In the 2023 LTI Program, TSR-dependent PSUs require above-market performance at the 55th percentile to achieve target vesting, as determined at the end of the three-year performance period
Largely Formulaic Criteria
In the 2023 STI Program, 91% of the annual target opportunity was formulaic, with the remaining 9% tied to strategic objectives for each individual executive, which are qualitatively evaluated by the Compensation Committee (or, in the case of the CEO, the independent members of the Board)
In the 2023 LTI Program, 100% of the payout opportunity for the 2023 PSU component is formulaically determined
No Positive Discretion
The Compensation Committee does not exercise positive discretion in making compensation decisions under the STI Program or with respect to performance-based metrics under our LTI Program
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Furthermore, our executive compensation program includes the following practices and policies, which we believe reinforce our executive compensation philosophy and objectives and are aligned with the interests of our stockholders:
What We Do
 
ü
At-risk compensation.
ü
Multi-year vesting and performance periods.
üAnnual say-on-pay vote.
ü
Year-round stockholder engagement.
ü
Independent compensation consultant retained by the Compensation Committee.
ü
Annual comparator peer group review.
ü
“Double-trigger” change of control provisions in equity award agreements.
ü
Limits on severance payments.
ü
Clawback policies.
ü
Stock ownership requirements.
ü
Annual risk assessment.
What We Don't Do
ûNo repricing or replacing of underwater SSARs or stock options.
û
No hedging of Company securities and restricted pledging of Company securities.
û
No change-of-control tax gross-ups in employment agreements.
û
No defined benefit pension benefits.
û
No dividends paid out on unearned or unvested stock awards.




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Our Executive Compensation Structure
Given our emphasis on performance-based compensation, the Compensation Committee generally limits increases to fixed compensation amounts for our executives and delivers a greater percentage of compensation increases in the form of variable (or "at-risk") compensation, with a significant portion of such variable compensation being performance-based. The following chart illustrates the average allocation of the total direct compensation that our NEOs, other than our CEO, are eligible to earn, including annual bonus at target, and in the case of the long-term incentives, those that were granted in 2023. As described in more detail in the section titled "CEO Compensation" below, Mr. Rodriguez did not receive a long-term incentive award in 2023 due to a grant of premium-priced SSARs that he received in 2019, which was intended to be in lieu of any other equity grants for five years following the date on which the Board approved the award (the "CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award"). As a result, because the allocation of Mr. Rodriguez's total direct compensation for 2023 did not reflect a typical annual compensation structure, Mr. Rodriguez is excluded from the chart below.
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We believe it to be in the best interests of our stockholders to have a balanced executive compensation program that includes a blend of fixed and at-risk compensation, including short- and long-term compensation and that emphasizes a pay-for-performance culture. The following table generally summarizes the key elements of our executive compensation program in 2023.

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Base SalaryShort-Term Incentive Program
Long-Term Incentive Program
(other than CEO)(1)
It is appropriate that some portion of compensation be in a form that is fixed to provide executives with a base level of income. Base salaries can be adjusted based on individual performance, changes to portfolio of responsibilities and comparative market data.
Performance Measures
70% Financial: Adjusted Operating Income and Free Cash Flow

30% Strategic Objectives:
ESG-related factors(2) (70%)
Individual objectives for each NEO (30%)

Payout 0% to 200% of target
 
Performance Stock Units ("PSUs")
Restricted Stock Units ("RSUs")
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Performance criteria 75% Adjusted EPS attributable to DaVita Inc., 25% Relative total shareholder return ("TSR")
Payout 0% to 200% of target shares
Vests 100% in three years, following the conclusion of the three-year performance period


Vests 50% in three years and 50% in four years

(1) As noted above, our CEO did not receive a grant under the 2023 LTI Program due to the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award that he received in 2019, which was intended to be in lieu of equity awards through the fifth anniversary of the date on which the Board approved the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award.
(2) Home modalities penetration, patient engagement (known as Comprehensive Kidney Care Contracting ("CKCC") patient contact composite), teammate engagement scores, and water savings projects constitute 70% of the strategic objectives, or 21% of the total STI Program opportunity. These Strategic Objectives collectively represent ESG criteria that are priorities for the Company, are evaluated formulaically and are the same for all executive officer participants. Our business and finance teams closely collaborate with our legal and compliance teams, and DaVita has processes, policies/guidance and education in place as guardrails to support appropriate performance and incentives, including the performance and initiative behind these Strategic Objectives. For example, our policy is that modality selection (i.e., Home vs. In-Center) and other decisions related to a patient’s care are always made by the attending nephrologist and patient, and provided pursuant to a physician’s order. This footnote and policy statement are applicable to all DaVita actions and activities involving home dialysis and patient engagement, as described in this Proxy Statement.

Summary of Stockholder Engagement
At our 2023 Annual Meeting, approximately 95% of the votes cast by our stockholders were voted in favor of the compensation program for our NEOs. We believe this vote reflects support for our executive compensation program. Even with the continued stockholder support for our NEO compensation program, we continue to evaluate our program to keep management incentives market competitive and aligned with stockholder interests. Since our 2023 Annual Meeting, we contacted stockholders representing approximately 81% of our shares outstanding, including our largest institutional stockholders, to see if they were interested in engaging with us to discuss our existing compensation program or other governance matters.1 During discussions with our stockholders, they generally expressed satisfaction with our executive compensation program and emphasized the continued "pay-for-performance" design of our program. We have found this stockholder feedback to be informative and have considered such feedback, along with a review of competitive practices and evolving business priorities, when making executive compensation decisions.
1 Calculations relating to stockholder outreach statistics were performed using stockholders of DaVita shares outstanding as of September 30, 2023.
How We Make Executive Compensation Decisions
Our Executive Compensation Philosophies and Objectives
The Compensation Committee believes that our executive compensation program should emphasize performance and align our NEOs' interests with those of our stockholders, including with relation to financial performance, ESG performance and relative stock price performance. The Compensation Committee seeks to foster these objectives through a compensation system that focuses heavily on variable, performance-based incentives that create a balanced focus on our short-term and long-term strategic and financial goals. The Compensation Committee's goal
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Compensation Discussion and Analysis
has been to implement an executive compensation program to help drive above-market results and that is built upon our long-standing executive compensation philosophies and objectives, as described below, which we believe have contributed to our long-term success.
Sustained Meaningful Profitable Growth and Stockholder Value Creation
 é
 é
 é
Pay-for-Performance.

A significant percentage of an executive's compensation should be directly aligned with Company and individual performance, with a balance between short-term and long-term performance.
Align with Stockholder Interests.

Executives' interests should be aligned with stockholder interests through the risks and rewards of DaVita equity ownership.
Attract and Retain the Right Talent.

Executive compensation should be market-competitive in order to attract and retain highly qualified talent with a performance- and service-driven mindset.
Role of the Compensation Committee
Our Compensation Committee, composed solely of independent directors, reviews and approves our overall executive compensation program, strategy and policies and sets the compensation of our NEOs (other than our CEO, for whom the Compensation Committee makes a recommendation to the independent members of the Board, as described below). The Compensation Committee’s independent compensation consultant provides the Compensation Committee with an analysis of comparative market data on, among other things, the amount and mix of compensation for senior executives, including the CEO, at a group of comparable companies within our industry to help inform the Compensation Committee's deliberation on compensation decisions.
The full description of the Compensation Committee's responsibilities is provided in the Compensation Committee Charter, available on our website at www.davita.com/about/corporate-governance.
Role of Board
The independent members of the Board review and ratify recommendations by the Compensation Committee as it relates to compensation decisions for the CEO. The Board also provides input for consideration by members of the Compensation Committee with respect to the structure of the STI and LTI Programs, including their relationship to financial performance, investor guidance, strategy and ESG objectives.
Role of CEO and Management Team
In carrying out its responsibilities, the Compensation Committee works with members of our management team, including our CEO. Our CEO reviews the individual performance of each other executive officer with, and makes compensation recommendations to, the Compensation Committee. Our CCO also provides information to the Compensation Committee with respect to each executive officer's commitment to compliance as demonstrated by modeling compliant behavior, leading in a compliant manner, identifying and resolving potential risks in a compliant manner, and other compliance-related factors as appropriate. In addition, the Chair of the Compensation Committee works closely with the Company's legal, people services and finance teams between Compensation Committee meetings, as needed, to refine the detailed criteria and terms and conditions for the STI and LTI Programs, for further consideration and ultimate approval by the Compensation Committee, and in the case of the CEO, ratification by the independent members of the Board. Notwithstanding the foregoing, neither the CEO nor any NEO is present during the Board and Compensation Committee decisions of his or her own pay.
Role of Independent Compensation Consultant
The Compensation Committee has selected and directly retains the services of Compensia, a national compensation consulting firm, as its independent compensation consultant. The Compensation Committee has the sole authority to retain or replace Compensia in its discretion. Compensia does not provide consulting services to Company management and may not provide such services without prior approval of the Chair of the Compensation Committee. Accordingly, Compensia only provides compensation consulting services to the Compensation
37


Compensation Discussion and Analysis
Committee, and works with the Company’s management only on matters for which the Compensation Committee provides direction and is responsible. The Compensation Committee periodically seeks input from Compensia on a range of external market factors, including evolving compensation trends, peer companies and market survey data. Compensia also provides general observations on the Company’s executive compensation program, but it does not determine the amount or form of compensation for the executive officers.
Pursuant to the rules of the SEC and NYSE, the Compensation Committee has assessed the independence of Compensia. The Company has determined that the work of Compensia for the Compensation Committee did not raise any conflicts of interest.
Market Competitiveness
Each year, the Compensation Committee, starting with a recommendation from Compensia, identifies a group of peer companies for purposes of evaluating the overall competitiveness of our executive officers' compensation levels. We first focused on companies in our industry with revenues that are 0.4x to 2.5x our revenues and a market capitalization that is 0.2x to 5.0x our market capitalization. Because of the limited number of direct peers in the healthcare services and facilities industries that met this "size" criteria, we then expanded our industry scope to include the broader healthcare industry. We believe the compensation paid by the resultant comparator peer group is representative of the compensation required to attract, retain and motivate our executive talent.
For purposes of evaluating compensation decisions in early 2023, we used the following compensation peer group, which was the same peer group used for purposes of evaluating compensation decisions in 2022:
2023 Compensation Peer Group
 Avantor  Laboratory Corp of America
 Baxter International  Molina Healthcare
 Centene  Revvity (f/k/a Perkin Elmer)
 Dentsply Sirona Quest Diagnostics
 Encompass Health  Select Medical Holdings
 HCA Healthcare  Syneos Health
 Henry Schein  Tenet Healthcare
 Hologic Universal Health Services
 IQVIA Holdings Zimmer Biomet Holdings

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Compensation Discussion and Analysis
What We Pay and Why
Base Salary
Base salaries are established at levels deemed necessary to enable us to attract and retain highly qualified executives with reference to both our peer group and comparative pay within the Company for executives with similar levels of responsibility, the prior experience of the executive, and expected contributions to Company performance. Based on a review of competitive market data, the Compensation Committee determined not to increase the base salaries for the NEOs from 2022 to 2023, except for Mr. Rodriguez and Ms. Waters, whose base salaries were increased to more closely align with the competitive market. Mr. Rodriguez's base salary was last increased in June 2019 in connection with his appointment as our CEO and, in approving his increase, the Compensation Committee also considered his individual performance since assuming the role in 2019, and took into account the fact that he had not received a base salary increase in four years, during which time his base salary had become less competitive to the market. Base salaries for the NEOs as of December 31 of each year are reflected in the following table:
Name2022 Base Salary2023 Base SalaryPercentage Increase in Base Salary in 2023
Javier J. Rodriguez$1,200,000 $1,500,000 25 %
Joel Ackerman$700,000 $700,000 %
Michael D. Staffieri$800,000 $800,000 %
Kathleen A. Waters$650,000 $700,000 %
James O. Hearty$500,000 $500,000 %
Short-Term Incentive Program for 2023
The participants in the 2023 STI Program had a target bonus approved by the Compensation Committee, and with respect to the CEO, ratified by the independent members of the Board. Participants are eligible to earn 0% to 200% of their target bonus based on performance against the predetermined and approved STI Program metrics. Based on a review of competitive market data, the Compensation Committee determined not to increase the target bonus opportunities for the NEOs from 2022 to 2023, except for Mr. Rodriguez, whose target bonus opportunity was increased from $1,800,000 to $2,250,000 in order to maintain his target incentive opportunity as 150% of his updated base salary for 2023. The following table summarizes the target bonus and target bonus as a percent of base salary for each of the NEOs:
Name2023 Base Salary2023 Target Incentive Opportunity
2023 Target Incentive Opportunity as a Percentage of Salary1
Javier J. Rodriguez$1,500,000 $2,250,000 150 %
Joel Ackerman$700,000 $750,000 107 %
Michael D. Staffieri$800,000 $1,050,000 131 %
Kathleen A. Waters$700,000 $650,000 93 %
James O. Hearty$500,000 $400,000 80 %
1 The target incentive opportunities for the NEOs other than the CEO were approved by the Compensation Committee in terms of an absolute dollar opportunity and this column includes the percentage opportunity determined by dividing the target dollar value by the NEO’s base salary.
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The following table summarizes the performance metrics, weightings, criteria ranges, performance-based eligibility ranges, actual performance and eligible payout percentages for the components of the 2023 STI Program:
2023 STI Program Performance MetricsPerformance Metrics WeightingsCriteria RangePerformance Based Eligibility Range (%)Actual PerformanceEligible Payout Achieved (%)
Financial: Adjusted Operating Income*50.0%$1,375 million to $1,650 million
($1,500 million target)
0%; 25% - 200%$1,709 million**200.0%
Financial: Free Cash Flow*20.0%$650 million to $925 million
($775 million target)
0%; 25% - 200% $1,236 million200.0%
Strategic Objectives: Home modalities penetration
(Q4 2023)
7.5%15.25% to 17.00%
(16.00% target)
0%; 25% - 200%15.47%47.0%
Strategic Objectives: CKCC patient contact composite7.5%20.0% to 55.0%
(45.0% target)
0%; 25% - 200%54.8%198.0%
Strategic Objectives: Teammate engagement
(average of 2023 survey results)
3.0%74.0% to 82.0%
(78.0% target)
0%; 25% - 200%80.2%155.0%
Strategic Objectives: Water savings projects
(millions of gallons)
3.0%25 to 75
(50 target)
0%; 25% - 200%100200.0%
Strategic Objectives: Individual objectives9.0%Varies by NEO0% - 200%Varies by NEOVaries by NEO***
* “Adjusted Operating Income” and “Free Cash Flow” are non-GAAP financial measures. “Adjusted operating income" represents operating income excluding certain items which we do not believe are indicative of our ordinary results of operations, including, among other things, impairment charges, earn-out revaluations, capacity closure charges, restructuring charges, IKC adjustments and accruals for legal matters. “Free Cash Flow” represents net cash provided by operating activities from continuing operations less distributions to noncontrolling interests and all capital expenditures (including development capital expenditures, routine maintenance and information technology), plus contributions from noncontrolling interests and sale leaseback proceeds related to certain self-developed properties.
** For purposes of the 2023 STI Program and as presented above, “adjusted operating income” also includes certain adjustments approved by the Compensation Committee at the time it approved the 2023 STI Program and resulted in a $25 million deduction to our 2023 adjusted operating income as reported in our Company's Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023 (the “2023 Form 10-K”) ($1,734 million). This deduction is associated with a COVID-19 normalization adjustment relating to lower actual than budgeted impact of the ongoing COVID-19 Pandemic in 2023, offset by foreign exchange losses on the mark-to-market impact of cash held in a non-functional currency in our Asia-Pacific joint venture in 2023 of $0.5 million. As a result, adjusted operating income presented above for purposes of the 2023 STI Program differs from the non-GAAP financial results we report in our 2023 Form 10-K. None of these non-GAAP financial measures should be considered as a substitute for, or superior to, the measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. Please see Annex A for a presentation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measure to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure.
*** Actual payouts with respect to the individual objectives vary by NEO, but are subject to a maximum payout of 200% of target.
Adjusted Operating Income (weighted 50.0%)1
The 2023 target of $1,500 million was set at the midpoint of our initial guidance range for 2023 adjusted operating income provided to stockholders on February 22, 2023 and above the 2022 actual adjusted operating income reported in the Company's Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022 ($1,450 million2). As the pre-established adjustments vary each year, the targets we set for the STI Program may be set below prior year STI Program results due to the impact of such adjustments, which we do not believe are reflective of the Company's ongoing operations. We believe that for the purposes of setting the target adjusted operating income under the 2023 STI Program, our reported financial results are a better reflection of the ongoing and potential future performance of the business compared to the reported performance used for 2022 incentive plan outcome purposes.
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Compensation Discussion and Analysis

Setting Adjusted Operating Income Goal
$ in millions
3476
1 Represents Adjusted Operating Income, which is a non-GAAP financial measure that represents operating income excluding certain items which we do not believe are indicative of our ordinary results of operations, including, among other things, impairment charges, earn-out revaluation, capacity closure charges, restructuring charges, IKC adjustments and accruals for legal matters.
2 Represents Adjusted Operating Income of $1,450 million as reported in the Company's Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022. Please see Annex A for a presentation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measure to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure.
3 Includes IKC incremental net investments. The Company made and continues to make investments in building our integrated care capabilities with a view towards improving clinical outcomes for our patients and reducing the overall cost of comprehensive kidney care.
4 In 2022, the Company incurred approximately $51 million of expenses to counter union policy efforts, and did not expect to incur similar expenses in 2023.
Free Cash Flow (weighted 20.0%)
2023 target ($775 million) was set at the midpoint of our initial free cash flow guidance for 2023 ($650 million - $900 million)1.
2023 target was set below 2022 free cash flow ($817 million2) primarily because of higher proceeds from the sale of self-developed properties in 2022, including one of our central business offices, that were not expected to recur in 2023.
1 Initial guidance range as described above refers to selected 2023 guidance measures provided to stockholders on February 22, 2023 with our earnings results for the year ended December 31, 2022.
2 Represents Free Cash Flow of $817 million as reported in the Company's Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022. Please see Annex A for a presentation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measure to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure.

Strategic Objectives
The STI Program includes a strategic objective component in order to incentivize actions that support the successful execution of our strategic operating plan. For example, in 2021, we built upon our long-standing commitment to corporate citizenship and announced a set of ESG goals for 2025 aligned with the five pillars of our ESG strategy. Many of these 2025 goals are aspirational; however, the Compensation Committee considered our ESG goals as it determined the strategic objectives under the 2023 STI Program in order to establish goals that were viewed as aligned with, and supportive of, our broader set of 2025 ESG goals and strategic operating plan. Accordingly, the Compensation Committee established goals relating to home modalities penetration, CKCC patient contact composite, teammate engagement scores, and water savings projects, which constituted 70% of the strategic objectives, or 21% of the total short-term incentive opportunity. The strategic objectives under the 2023 STI Program collectively represent ESG criteria that are priorities for the Company and support the Company’s progress towards its 2025 ESG Goals. These strategic objective goals are evaluated formulaically and are the same for all executive officer participants.
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Home Modalities Penetration (weighted 7.5%)
An important element of our clinical strategic imperatives has been the continued development and implementation of, and educating our patients regarding the option of, home dialysis.
The home modalities penetration metric is calculated as the number of home treatments (peritoneal dialysis and home hemodialysis) in the fourth quarter of 2023 divided by the number of non-acute treatments of all dialysis modalities during the same time period, in each case, for the Company's U.S. dialysis segment.
2023 target was set at 16.00%, which is 18 basis points higher than the 2022 actual of 15.82%.
CKCC Patient Contact Composite (weighted 7.5%)
To reflect the importance of IKC programs to our long-term growth, we include CKCC patient contact composite goals in our STI Program.
This metric is a blended metric based on a proprietary method of calculating the number of certain types of interactions between members of the IKC care management team and CKCC patients. We believe that these types of patient contact metrics provide a comprehensive and timely indication of performance for CKCC programs.
Teammate Engagement (weighted 3.0%)
We strive to be a community first and company second, and call ourselves a Village. To be a healthy Village, we need to attract, retain and invest in highly qualified and diverse teammates. Including a teammate engagement metric helps us assess whether we are implementing strategies that support our mission to be the employer of choice.
This metric is based on the average of engagement surveys of all U.S. teammates completed during 2023, weighted by the participation percentage of each survey.
2023 target was set requiring us to sustain our 2022 engagement scores, reflecting the continued uncertainty of the external environment, including the uncertainty, challenges and disruption of the persisting COVID-19 pandemic.
Water Savings Projects (weighted 3.0%)
Including an environmental goal in our STI Program is aligned with our commitment to promote environmental stewardship through projects and initiatives in the communities in which we operate.
In 2023, this metric was based on water savings and was measured in millions of gallons of water saved at "top user" clinics following water savings interventions.

Individual Strategic Goals (weighted 9.0%)
The Compensation Committee believes that it is important to tie a portion of the STI Program to pre-established individual strategic objectives to allow the Compensation Committee to evaluate and recognize each NEO's individual performance in his or her area of responsibility and contribution to the overall performance of the Company. The individual strategic objectives vary by participant in the 2023 STI Program with performance across all objectives being evaluated qualitatively in the aggregate on a scale of 0% to 200%, and 100% representing target performance. Mr. Rodriguez annually evaluates the performance of each NEO (other than himself) against his or her pre-established strategic objectives and makes recommendations to the Compensation Committee regarding the individual strategic objective payouts under the STI Program based on such evaluation. The Compensation Committee and independent members of the Board each evaluate the performance of Mr. Rodriguez against his pre-established objectives. Payouts vary each year based on such evaluations of performance against the pre-established goals, with 2022 payouts to the NEOs averaging 92% of target and a five-year average payout of 126% of target.
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The 2023 individual strategic objectives applicable to the NEOs were aligned with our strategic operating plan and tailored to their functional areas of responsibility and generally fell within the performance categories of financial, strategic, technologies, operational and organizational goals and included specific goals, among others, relating to cost management, new technologies and our digital transformation initiatives and enterprise growth. The Compensation Committee designed the individual strategic objectives to be challenging, but achievable. For 2023, each participant’s performance against such objectives was determined holistically based on a retrospective consideration of each individual's performance in light of the Company's overall performance, the development of the Company, market, regulatory and competitive factors over the course of 2023, and expectations for these factors in the future.
2023 STI Program Payouts
The table below summarizes the performance metrics and their relative weights, and the eligible payout achieved, target incentive opportunity, and total eligible and actual STI Program award by NEO. Certain columns or rows may not precisely recalculate due to the presentation of rounded numbers.
Eligible Payout Achieved
2023 STI Program Performance MetricsPerformance Metrics WeightingsJavier J. RodriguezJoel AckermanMichael D. StaffieriKathleen A. WatersJames O. Hearty
Financial: Adjusted Operating Income50.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%
Financial: Free Cash Flow20.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%
Strategic Objectives: Home modalities penetration7.5%47.0%47.0%47.0%47.0%47.0%
Strategic Objectives: CKCC patient contact composite7.5%198.0%198.0%198.0%198.0%198.0%
Strategic Objectives: Teammate engagement3.0%155.0%155.0%155.0%155.0%155.0%
Strategic Objectives: Water savings projects3.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%
Strategic Objectives: Individual objectives9.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%200.0%
Total Weighted Eligible Payout Achieved187.0%187.0%187.0%187.0%187.0%
Target Incentive Opportunity$2,250,000$750,000$1,050,000$650,000$400,000
Total Eligible and Actual STI Program Award$4,208,063$1,402,688$1,963,763$1,215,663$748,100


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Long-Term Incentive Program for 2023
LTI Program awards are designed to provide a link to long-term stockholder value through equity awards for our executives. Under our LTI Program, the Compensation Committee has the authority to award various forms of long-term incentive grants, such as PSUs and RSUs. Consistent with past practice, annual LTI Program awards for 2023 were granted in March to each of the NEOs other than our CEO. As noted above, in light of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award that Mr. Rodriguez received in 2019, he did not participate in the Company's 2023 LTI Program as such award was intended to replace grants under the Company's LTI Program for five years following the date on which the Board approved the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award.
Strong Pay-for-Performance Alignment

For 2023, the Compensation Committee approved the 2023 LTI Program equity awards in the form of PSUs and RSUs, weighted 60% and 40%, respectively, for each NEO participant. After consideration of stockholder feedback and with input from Compensia, in order to further align with market practices and to support retention during the vesting period, the Compensation Committee determined to eliminate SSARs from the 2023 LTI Program for NEO participants and to grant the time-based portion of the 2023 LTI Program solely in the form of RSUs. With this change, the 2023 LTI Program remains entirely in the form of at-risk equity awards, with the value fluctuating based on our stock price performance and, in the case of the PSUs, our performance against the pre-established performance goals. In addition, after considering stockholder feedback and input from Compensia, the 2023 PSUs with vesting tied to adjusted EPS will vest based on the Company's cumulative performance over a three-year performance period rather than the prior practice of measuring adjusted EPS based on performance in each of years three and four of the performance period. We believe that these changes further align the Company's compensation program with the Company's sustained, long-term performance.

The annual LTI Program grants for 2023 include the following key elements to help drive Company performance and align with stockholder interests:

PSUs
Performance Goals: 75% related to adjusted EPS and 25% related to relative TSR as compared to the constituents of the S&P Health Care Services Select Industry Index ("Relative TSR").
Threshold performance required for payout at 25% of target shares, with potential to earn up to 200% of target shares.
Three-year vesting schedule, with 100% vesting on March 15, 2026, following conclusion of the three-year performance period, subject to continued service and achievement of the applicable performance goals.
RSUs
Multi-year vesting schedule, with 50% vesting on each of March 15, 2026 and March 15, 2027.

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Compensation Discussion and Analysis

PSU Performance Metrics
The table below summarizes the performance criteria range and percent range of target PSUs for the 2023 annual PSU grants. Given the market and operating conditions at the time the targets were set, the target payout levels were designed to be achievable with strong management performance, while maximum payout levels were designed to be difficult to achieve.
2023 PSU Performance MetricsPerformance Metrics WeightingsCriteria RangePercent of Target PSUsVesting
2023-2025 Cumulative Adjusted Earnings per Share1
75%$18.97 - $21.33
(Target: $20.13)
0%; 25% - 200% 100% March 15, 2026
Relative TSR v. S&P Health Care
 Services Select Industry Index2
25%10th - 90th percentile
(Target: 55th percentile)
0%; 25% - 200%100% March 15, 2026
1“Adjusted Earnings per Share” is a non-GAAP financial measure that represents a per share measure of adjusted net income. For purposes of the 2023 PSUs, “Adjusted Earnings per Share” represents our net income per share, adjusted as reported in our earnings release in the year of measurement, to exclude certain items from net income that we do not believe are indicative of our ordinary results of operations, generally including as applicable in that year, among other things, impairment charges, gains and losses on ownership changes, capacity closure charges, restructuring charges, accruals for legal matters and debt prepayment and refinancing charges. In addition, in accordance with the 2023 LTI Program, performance targets are subject to adjustment in the event that certain corporate transactions occur during the performance period.
2Vesting based on the percentile position represented by the return on investment in DaVita stock ("DaVita TSR") within the range of returns on investments in each of the constituents of the S&P Healthcare Services Select Industry Index (assuming dividend reinvestment). The percentage of target shares that vest are a function of the percentile ranking of DaVita's TSR. If our TSR is negative, then vesting is capped at the target number of PSUs regardless of our relative TSR performance.

We have used adjusted EPS as a criterion for all participants in the LTI Program since 2017 and, since 2021, the weighting of the PSUs for the NEOs has been 60% of their LTI Program opportunity. Relative TSR has been a component of the LTI Program since 2014.

The Compensation Committee set rigorous goals for the 2023 LTI Program, requiring strong performance over the three-year performance period based on compounded growth over the midpoint of our initial adjusted EPS guidance provided to stockholders on February 22, 2023. Specifically, in order for the 2023 PSU awards to vest at target, we must achieve an average adjusted EPS growth rate of 8% for each of 2024 and 2025. Consistent with prior years, after discussion and consideration of input from Compensia, the Compensation Committee decided that it was appropriate not to adjust the EPS targets for the volume of share repurchases because the expected share repurchase volume is incorporated into our EPS forecasts and target setting.
Setting Awards Under 2023 LTI Program
The Compensation Committee determines the annual LTI Program awards for our NEOs and other executives with the input of the CEO and Compensia, and after consideration of market data provided by Compensia. Each year, the CEO considers the following in recommending equity awards for executives other than himself to the Compensation Committee: (i) recent performance and trajectory of historical performance; (ii) level of responsibilities and expected changes to responsibilities; (iii) market levels of total compensation and long-term incentives for similar positions; (iv) the historical amounts granted and expected vesting levels; and (v) the "in-the-money value" of unvested equity currently held by participants.
The table below shows the aggregate number of shares subject to RSUs and target PSUs granted to each of our participating NEOs in 2023. When determining the size of the awards, the Compensation Committee considered market data and the competitive labor market for executive talent at the time of grant.
 
2023 Long-term Incentive AwardsShares Subject to PSUs (#)Shares Subject to RSUs (#)
Joel Ackerman35,50823,672
Michael D. Staffieri55,23436,823
Kathleen A. Waters27,61718,411
James O. Hearty11,0477,365
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2020 and 2021 PSU Results and Payouts
We began granting PSUs to executive officers in 2014. The performance metrics associated with the PSUs granted in 2020 and 2021 have been measured through the end of the relevant performance periods, with the exception of (i) the PSUs granted in 2021 for which the remaining performance metric is adjusted EPS for fiscal year 2024 and (ii) the PSUs granted in 2021 for which the remaining performance metric is Relative TSR measured through February 28, 2025.
The tables below summarize the criteria range and percentage range of target PSUs and detail the relative weightings of each performance metric for the 2020 and 2021 PSUs. The Compensation Committee did not make any COVID-related adjustments to the performance metrics applicable to the 2020 or 2021 PSUs.
   Performance Based
Eligibility Range
 Eligible
Payout Achieved
2020 PSU Performance MetricsWeightCriteria Range(%)Actual
Performance
(%)
2022 Adjusted Earnings Per Share1
37.5%$6.49 - $8.070%; 50% - 200%$7.13113%
2023 Adjusted Earnings Per Share1
37.5%$6.75 - $9.370%; 50% - 200%$8.39148%
Relative TSR (2023 vesting)12.5%100% + 2 x (Company TSR - S&P 500 Health Care Services Select Industry Index Total Return)0% - 200%(21.9)%56%
Relative TSR (2024 vesting)12.5%100% + 2 x (Company TSR - S&P 500 Health Care Services Select Industry Index Total Return)0% - 200%18.8%138%
   Performance Based
Eligibility Range
 Eligible
Payout Achieved
2021 PSU Performance MetricsWeightCriteria Range(%)Actual
Performance
(%)
2023 Adjusted Earnings Per Share1
37.5%$9.19 - $12.750%; 50% - 200%$8.390%
2024 Adjusted Earnings Per Share1
37.5%$9.56 - $14.800%; 50% - 200%
In Progress2
N/A2
Relative TSR (2024 vesting)12.5%25th to 90th percentile of S&P Health Care Services Select Industry Index0%; 50% - 200%37th percentile70%
Relative TSR (2025 vesting)12.5%25th to 90th percentile of S&P Health Care Services Select Industry Index0%; 50% - 200%
In Progress2
N/A2
1“Adjusted Earnings per Share” or "Adjusted EPS" is a non-GAAP financial measure that represents a per share measure of adjusted net income. Adjusted net income excludes certain items from net income that we do not believe are indicative of our ordinary results of operations, including, among other things, impairment charges, earn-out revaluations, capacity closure charges, restructuring charges, IKC adjustments and accruals for legal matters. The 2022 Adjusted EPS targets for the 2020 PSUs that were approved at the time of grant exclude costs, net of taxes, of $0.53 per share associated with our opposition of a California ballot initiative. As a result, 2022 Adjusted EPS presented above for purposes of the 2020 PSU performance metrics differs from the non-GAAP financial results we reported in our 2022 Form 10-K. The 2023 Adjusted EPS targets for the 2020 and 2021 PSUs that were approved at the time of grant also exclude income, net of taxes, of $0.08 per share associated with a refund received in 2023 related to our opposition of a California ballot initiative in 2022. As a result, 2023 Adjusted EPS presented above for purposes of the 2020 and 2021 PSU performance metrics differs from the non-GAAP financial results we report in our 2023 Form 10-K.
2In progress as of April 26, 2024.
Kathleen Waters Performance Cash Award
In August 2022, in order to further link her compensation with the achievement of public policy goals of the Company, the Compensation Committee granted a performance cash award to Ms. Waters, pursuant to which she was eligible to receive a cash payment of $1,000,000 upon the achievement of certain public policy goals on or before December 31, 2023 (the "2022 Waters Performance Cash Award"). The public policy goals applicable to the 2022 Waters Performance Cash Award were not achieved as of December 31, 2023, and Ms. Waters did not earn or receive any payout under the 2022 Waters Performance Cash in 2023.
CEO Compensation
In connection with Mr. Rodriguez's transition to the CEO role in June 2019, and with the feedback of some of our largest stockholders, the Compensation Committee evaluated different compensation alternatives for Mr. Rodriguez. The Compensation Committee believed that the CEO's compensation structure should vary based on strategic context, and given the strategic reset that the Company was undergoing at the time he assumed the CEO role, the Compensation Committee believed that a single grant of 2,500,000 SSARs at a base price (similar to the strike
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Compensation Discussion and Analysis

price of an option) that was a significant premium to the then-current market price in lieu of any other equity grants through the five-year period from the Board's approval of the grant was the most appropriate form of compensation for Mr. Rodriguez to drive long-term stockholder value creation. Accordingly, the Company has not granted Mr. Rodriguez any long-term incentive awards since the grant of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award.
The terms of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award were designed with input from Compensia, and the award was structured to reflect stockholder feedback and incentivize the creation of sustained stockholder value, resulting in the following key features in the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award design: (i) premium-price (specifically, the base price was set at a 56% premium to the price per share on the day before Mr. Rodriguez assumed the CEO role on June 1, 2019 and a 20% premium to the price per share at which the Company purchased shares in its then recently completed modified "Dutch Auction" tender offer); (ii) multi-year vesting (50% on each of November 4, 2022 and November 4, 2023, respectively); (iii) five-year holding period (through November 4, 2024); and (iv) a five year term (expiring on November 4, 2024), requiring the CEO to generate significant stockholder value creation over this period of time in order to realize significant value for himself. Any exercised portion of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award remains subject to the five-year holding period described above. The ultimate value realized by Mr. Rodriguez under the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award is highly uncertain and linked to the long-term sustained value created under Mr. Rodriguez's leadership.
The summary of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award presented in this section is qualified in its entirety by reference to the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award itself, which is filed with the SEC as Appendix A to our Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A, filed with the SEC on December 6, 2019.

Other Elements of Our 2023 Executive Compensation Program
Severance and Change of Control Arrangements
We have entered into employment or severance arrangements with each of our NEOs, including a new employment agreement with Mr. Rodriguez in 2019 in connection with his transition to CEO. These arrangements, among other things, provide for severance benefits in the event of a termination of employment in certain circumstances, including, with respect to certain NEOs, the departure of the NEO following a change of control of our Company. When entering into employment or severance arrangements with our NEOs, we attempt to provide severance and change of control benefits which strike a balance between providing sufficient protections for the NEO while still providing post-termination compensation that we consider reasonable and in the interests of the Company and our stockholders.
The terms of individual agreements vary, but under our current stock-based award agreements, accelerated vesting of stock-based awards is generally triggered when a change of control event occurs and either the acquiring entity fails to assume, convert or replace the stock-based award or if the executive resigns for “good reason” or is terminated by the Company without “cause” as provided in his or her applicable employment agreement, all within a certain period of time after the effective date of the change of control event. The additional acceleration provisions in our stock-based award agreements further serve to secure the continued employment and commitment of our NEOs prior to or following a change of control. See the subsection titled “Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change of Control” below for a description of the severance and change in control arrangements for our NEOs, and for more information regarding accelerated vesting under our stock-based award agreements.
Deferred Compensation Program
Our deferred compensation program permits certain teammates, including our NEOs, to defer compensation at the election of the participant. We do not utilize deferred compensation as a significant component of compensation, and there are no Company contributions or above-market returns available under the program.
Limited Other Personal Benefits
Our compensation program for executive officers is designed to emphasize compensation based on performance and compensation which serves to further align our executive officers’ interests with those of our stockholders. As a result, the Compensation Committee has determined that the Company should provide a limited number of other personal benefits to our executive officers. In assessing the level and type of perquisites provided to our executive officers, the Compensation Committee considers, among other things, the overall targeted compensation to be
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delivered to the executive officers, factoring in the expected cost of the approved perquisites in its determination of such compensation.

The Compensation Committee has authorized limited personal use of fractionally-owned or chartered corporate aircraft by Mr. Rodriguez and Mr. Staffieri. The Compensation Committee believes that access to an aircraft for personal travel enables them to maximize their work hours, particularly in light of their demanding business travel schedules, and allows them greater time to attend to Company matters. Such use is subject to robust oversight, including an annual review by the Compensation Committee, input by Compensia, and the ultimate annual allocation for our CEO is subject to approval by the independent members of our Board.

In 2023, as part of its Enterprise Risk Management oversight responsibilities, the Board authorized a third-party security assessment on the security risks associated with the Company's executive team, including the CEO. The risk assessment included, among other things, consideration of recent local threats, as well as our CEO’s domestic and international travel. Based on that risk assessment, the Compensation Committee and the independent members of the Board established a security program for our CEO and have authorized the expenses associated with the establishment and operation of the program. The Board believes that this security program is essential to the safety and well-being of our CEO, which in turn promotes the continuity of our business strategy and the stability of our business. The security program for 2023 includes certain one-time initial setup costs that will not recur in future years, as well as costs related to ongoing services. We believe that the expenses associated with this security program are reasonable, necessary and appropriate business expenses and integral parts of the Company’s overall Enterprise Risk Management and physical security program. However, because they may be viewed as conveying a personal benefit to Mr. Rodriguez, SEC disclosure rules require that we include them in the total value of personal benefits paid to Mr. Rodriguez.
Share Ownership Requirements
Because a significant amount of the total compensation earned by our executive officers is in the form of equity, we have a management share ownership policy to ensure that executive officers accumulate a meaningful ownership stake in the Company over time by retaining a specified financial interest in our Common Stock. Our current policy applies to all executive officers and is similar to our share ownership policy that applies to all non-employee members of the Board as described above under the heading "Corporate Governance — Non-Employee Director Share Ownership Policy," except that the ownership threshold (as defined in the policy) relates to base salary (rather than annual retainer) and in-the-money value of vested but unexercised stock options and SSARs will count towards the ownership requirements applicable to our executive officers to reflect that the executives are able to exercise such SSARs and options at any point and are subject to the risk of fluctuations in stock price, similar to the Company's other stockholders. The chart below shows the salary multiple guidelines for the NEOs. As of December 31, 2023, each NEO was in compliance with our share ownership policy. Restrictions and limitations with respect to hedging and pledging of Company securities by our executive officers are described under the heading "Corporate GovernanceInsider Trading PolicyHedging and Pledging."
Named Executive OfficerGuidelineCompliant with Guidelines
Javier J. Rodriguez6x base salary
Michael D. Staffieri3x base salary
Joel Ackerman3x base salary
Kathleen A. Waters3x base salary
James O. Hearty3x base salary
Policies Regarding Recoupment of Incentive Compensation

We maintain two recoupment policies. Specifically, one of the recoupment policies is designed to satisfy the Company's obligations under Section 10D-1 of the Exchange Act and applicable NYSE listing rules, and generally requires, in the event of an accounting restatement of the Company’s financial statements due to the material noncompliance of the Company with any financial reporting requirement under federal and/or state securities law, current and former executive officers of the Company to repay an amount equal to certain excess incentive-based compensation (without regard to taxes) received by such person during the three-year period prior to such financial statement restatement. The excess amount subject to recoupment under this policy equals the amount that was
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Compensation Discussion and Analysis

awarded on the basis of the erroneous results, and which is greater than the amount such person would have received had the Company’s financial statements been correctly reported.

In addition, we continue to maintain a separate recoupment policy that, among other things, includes "significant misconduct" by a domestic Senior Vice President or above of the Company as another possible triggering event for the recoupment of certain compensation, including through the cancellation of, or reimbursement of amounts received with respect to, certain equity awards. In general, the maximum amount of compensation that may be subject to recoupment under this policy is an amount equivalent to up to three years of a covered executive’s annual incentive compensation (including time-based equity awards), and such compensation is generally at risk for a period of three years from the date of such misconduct.


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Compensation Committee Report

The Compensation Committee of the Board is currently composed of four independent directors. The Compensation Committee oversees the Company’s compensation program on behalf of the Board. The Compensation Committee reviewed and discussed with management the Compensation Discussion and Analysis set forth in this Proxy Statement.

Based on the Compensation Committee’s review and discussion with management, the Compensation Committee recommended to the Board that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in the Company’s Proxy Statement for the Annual Meeting and the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023.
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
Barbara J. Desoer, Chair
Pamela M. Arway
John M. Nehra
Adam H. Schechter

The information contained above in this section titled “Compensation Committee Report” will not be considered “soliciting material” or to be “filed” with the SEC, nor will that information be incorporated by reference into any future filing under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, except to the extent that we specifically incorporate it by reference into a filing.
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Risk Considerations in Our Compensation Program
The Compensation Committee, with the assistance of Compensia, with respect to our executive compensation policies and practices, and Willis Towers Watson, with respect to the non-executive compensation policies and practices, conducted reviews of the Company’s material compensation policies and practices applicable to its teammates. Based on this review, the Compensation Committee concluded that these policies and practices do not create risks that are reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company. The key features of the executive compensation program that support this conclusion include:
a balance between cash and equity compensation;
a balance between short-term and long-term performance focus;
short-term incentive opportunities capped and not linked solely to any one specific goal;
severance payments limited to 3x base salary and target bonus;
equity awards with meaningful vesting requirements and, in some cases, holding requirements;
a clawback policy that permits the Board to recover annual bonuses and longer-term cash incentive and equity-based compensation from executive officers and members of the Board under certain circumstances;
share ownership guidelines;
significant independent Compensation Committee oversight; and
no hedging transactions and restricted pledging transactions involving equity securities of the Company by executives and members of the Board.

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Executive Compensation
2023 Summary Compensation Table
The following table contains compensation information for our NEOs for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2023, 2022 and 2021.
Name and Principal PositionYearSalary
($)
Bonus
($)
Stock
Awards
1
($)
Option
Awards2
($)
Non-Equity
Incentive
Plan
Compensation
3
($)
All Other
Compensation
4
($)
Total
($)
Javier J. Rodriguez
Chief Executive
Officer
20231,407,692 — — — 4,208,063 1,096,573 6,712,328 
20221,200,000 — — — 1,173,805 610,776 2,984,581 
20211,200,000 — — — 1,743,799 354,640 3,298,439 
Joel Ackerman
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
2023700,000 — 4,761,653 — 1,402,688 3,840 6,868,181 
2022700,000 — 1,985,362 1,524,421 489,085 3,840 4,702,708 
2021700,000 — 1,893,770 1,416,602 726,583 3,865 4,740,820 
Michael D. Staffieri
Chief Operating Officer, DaVita Kidney Care
2023800,000 — 7,406,966 — 1,963,763 252,129 10,422,858 
2022800,000 — 2,978,226 2,286,561 684,720 169,176 6,918,683 
2021800,000 — 2,840,778 2,124,886 1,017,216 157,805 6,940,685 
Kathleen A. Waters
Chief Legal and Public Affairs Officer
2023684,615 — 3,703,459 — 1,215,663 3,840 5,607,577 
2022650,000 — 1,896,006 558,922 423,874 3,840 3,532,642 
2021642,308 — 1,828,766 519,415 629,705 3,840 3,624,034 
James O. Hearty
Chief Compliance Officer
2023500,000 — 1,481,445 — 748,100 3,840 2,733,385 
2022500,000 — 689,414 203,219 264,446 3,840 1,660,919 
2021500,000 — 664,963 188,870 387,511 4,068 1,745,412 
1The amounts reported in this column reflect RSU and PSU awards and represent the aggregate grant date fair value of all such awards granted to the NEO during the year as estimated by the Company in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification Topic 718, Compensation-Stock Compensation ("FASB ASC Topic 718"). In accordance with SEC rules, the amounts included in the Stock Awards column for the 2023 PSU awards are calculated based on the probable outcome of the performance conditions for such awards on the grant date. If the probable outcome of the performance conditions as of the grant date had been maximum performance, then the grant date fair value of such PSUs would have been as follows: Mr. Ackerman — $5,923,267; Mr. Staffieri — $9,213,889; Ms. Waters — $4,606,974; and Mr. Hearty — $1,842,820. See Note 17 to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in our 2023 Form 10-K for a discussion of the relevant assumptions used in calculating these amounts pursuant to FASB ASC Topic 718. Please note that there were no equity awards granted to our CEO during 2021 - 2023 due to the grant of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award, which was intended to be in lieu of any other equity grants for five years following the date on which the Board approved the award, as described in more detail in the CD&A in the section titled "CEO Compensation."
2The amounts reported in this column represent the aggregate grant date fair value of SSAR awards granted to the NEOs during the year as estimated by the Company in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718. See Note 17 to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in the 2023 Form 10-K for a discussion of the relevant assumptions used in calculating these amounts pursuant to FASB ASC Topic 718.
3The amounts reported in this column represent amounts earned under the STI Programs for performance periods ending in 2023, 2022, and 2021, respectively. The awards are reported for the year with respect to which they were earned, regardless of when the award was granted or paid.
4The amounts reported in this column are set forth by category below. Other than the use of a fractionally-owned or chartered corporate aircraft, the amounts disclosed are the actual or share of actual costs to the Company of providing these benefits. With respect to the personal use of fractionally-owned or chartered corporate aircraft, the incremental personal cost is calculated based on the variable operating costs related to the operation of the aircraft, including fuel costs and landing fees, trip-related repairs and maintenance, catering and other miscellaneous variable costs, and excludes fixed costs that do not change based on usage as the fractionally-owned or chartered corporate aircraft is used primarily for business purposes. Occasionally, a spouse or other guest may accompany NEOs on corporate aircraft when the aircraft is already scheduled for business purposes and can accommodate additional passengers and, in such instances, the value of such spouse or guest usage is included in such NEO's personal income in accordance with applicable tax regulations. In those cases, there is no aggregate incremental cost to the Company, and, as a result, no amount is reflected in the 2023 Summary Compensation Table. The value of the personal use of a fractionally-owned or chartered corporate aircraft by our NEOs is included in their personal income in accordance with applicable tax regulations. Amounts reported in the "Other Personal Benefits" column below for Mr. Rodriguez includes amounts related to the use of fractionally-owned or chartered corporate aircraft ($667,166); amounts attributable to the one-time initial set-up costs and ongoing provision of executive security services ($393,191), which the Company does not view to be personal in nature, but is disclosing here in compliance with the applicable disclosure regulations; amounts attributable to personal use of Company tickets to certain sporting events; and amounts attributable to the Company's payment of the required filing fee incurred by Mr. Rodriguez under the Hart-Scott Rodino Act of 1976, or HSR Act, as approved by the independent members of the Board ($30,000). The amounts reflected for Mr. Staffieri are for use of fractionally-owned or chartered corporate aircraft ($246,693) and amounts attributable to personal use of Company tickets to certain sporting events.
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Executive Compensation

NameYearOther Personal Benefits
($)
Life Insurance Premiums
($)
Company Contribution
to Defined Contribution Plan
($)
Total All Other
Compensation
($)
Javier J. Rodriguez2023$1,092,397 $576 $3,600 $1,096,573 
Joel Ackerman2023$— $240 $3,600 $3,840 
Michael D. Staffieri2023$248,193 $336 $3,600 $252,129 
Kathleen A. Waters2023$— $240 $3,600 $3,840 
James O. Hearty2023$— $240 $3,600 $3,840 

53

Executive Compensation
2023 Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table
The following table sets forth information concerning plan-based awards made to each of the NEOs during 2023.
 Estimated Future Payouts
Under Non-Equity
Incentive Plan Awards
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Equity
Incentive Plan Awards
 
NameGrant
Date
Approval DateThreshold
($)
Target
($)
Maximum
($)
Threshold
(#)
Target
(#)
Maximum
(#)
All Other Stock Awards:
Number of Shares of Stock or Units (#)
All Other Options Awards: Number of Securities Underlying Options (#)Exercise or Base Price of Option Awards ($/Sh)
Grant Date Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards ($)4
Javier J. Rodriguez— — $— $2,250,000 $4,500,000 — — — — — — $— 
Joel Ackerman— — $— $750,000 $1,500,000 — — — — — — $— 
3/15/20233/14/2023$— $— $— 8,877 35,508 71,016 — — — $2,961,634 
3/15/20233/14/2023$— $— $— — — — 23,672 — — $1,800,019 
Michael D. Staffieri— — $— $1,050,000 $2,100,000 — — — — — — $— 
3/15/20233/14/20232$— $— $— 13,808 55,234 110,468 — — — $4,606,945 
3/15/20233/14/20233$— $— $— — — — 36,823 — — $2,800,021 
Kathleen A. Waters— — 1$— $650,000 $1,300,000 — — — — — — $— 
3/15/20233/14/20232$— $— $— 6,904 27,617 55,234 — — — $2,303,487 
3/15/20233/14/20233$— $— $— — — — 18,411 — — $1,399,972 
James O. Hearty— — 1$— $400,000 $800,000 — — — — — — $— 
3/15/20233/14/20232$— $— $— 2,762 11,047 22,094 — — — $921,410 
3/15/20233/14/20233$— $— $— — — — 7,365 — — $560,035 
1Represents applicable amounts for our 2023 STI Program under the DaVita Inc. 2020 Incentive Award Plan (the "2020 Plan"). The amount in the “Maximum” column represents the maximum amount the NEO was eligible to earn under the 2023 STI Program if all performance criteria were achieved at their highest payout level. The amount in the “Target” column represents the payout amount the NEO was eligible to earn under the 2023 STI Program if all performance criteria were achieved at their target payout level.
2This number represents PSUs awarded under the 2020 Plan. The PSU awards vest 100% on March 15, 2026, subject to the NEO’s continued employment and the achievement of the underlying performance conditions. For a description of the PSUs, see the subsection titled “Compensation Discussion and Analysis — What We Pay and Why — Long-Term Incentive Program for 2023” in this Proxy Statement.
3This number represents RSUs granted under the 2020 Plan. The RSUs vest 50% each on March 15, 2026 and March 15, 2027, subject to the NEO's continued employment. For a description of the RSUs, see the subsection titled “Compensation Discussion and Analysis — What We Pay and Why — Long-Term Incentive Program for 2023” in this Proxy Statement.
4The amounts for RSUs and PSUs represent the aggregate grant date fair values of each award determined pursuant to FASB ASC Topic 718 and, in the case of PSUs, are based upon the probable outcome of the applicable performance conditions on the grant date. See Note 17 to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in our 2023 Form 10-K for a discussion of the relevant assumptions used in calculating grant date fair value pursuant to FASB ASC Topic 718.
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2023 Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End Table
The following table sets forth information concerning outstanding SSARs and unvested stock awards held by each of the NEOs as of December 31, 2023.
 
 Option Awards
Stock Awards
NameGrant
Date
Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options (#) ExercisableNumber of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options (#) UnexercisableOption Exercise Price ($)Option Expiration DateNumber of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested (#)
Market Value of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested1 ($)
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Shares, Units, or Other Rights that Have Not Vested (#)
Equity Incentive
Plan Awards:
Market or Payout Value of Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other Rights
that Have Not
Vested
1 ($)
Javier J. Rodriguez1/23/20202,000,000 — $67.80 11/4/2024— — — — 
Joel Ackerman6/20/2019110,000 — $52.41 6/20/2024— — — — 
3/15/202039,499 239,500 2$75.95 3/15/2025— — — — 
3/15/2021— 44,065 2$108.93 3/15/2026— — — — 
3/15/2022— 43,388 2$110.63 3/15/2027— — — — 
3/15/2020— — — — 10,952 4$1,147,332 4,936 5$517,095 
3/15/2021— — — — — — 7,229 6$757,310 
3/15/2022— — — — — — 13,219 7$1,384,822 
3/15/2023— — — — 23,672 3$2,479,879 — — 
3/15/2023— — — — — — 71,016 8$7,439,636 
Michael D. Staffieri6/20/2019200,000 — $52.41 6/20/2024— — — — 
3/15/202059,249 259,250 2$75.95 3/15/2025— — — — 
3/15/2021— 66,097 2$108.93 3/15/2026— — — — 
3/15/2022— 65,080 2$110.63 3/15/2027— — — — 
3/15/2020— — — — 16,428 4$1,720,997 7,406 5$775,853 
3/15/2021— — — — — — 10,845 6$1,136,122 
3/15/2022— — — — — — 19,830 7$2,077,391 
3/15/2023— — — — 36,823 3$3,857,577 — — 
3/15/2023— — — — — — 110,468 8$11,572,628 
Kathleen A. Waters6/20/201940,000 — $52.41 6/20/2024— — — — 
3/15/202013,166 213,167 2$75.95 3/15/2025— — — — 
3/15/2021— 16,157 2$108.93 3/15/2026— — — — 
3/15/2022— 15,908 2$110.63 3/15/2027— — — — 
3/15/2020— — — — 3,292 3$344,870 — — 
3/15/2020— — — — 7,302 4$764,958 3,290 5$344,660 
3/15/2021— — — — 4,039 3$423,126 — — 
3/15/2021— — — — — — 5,301 6$555,333 
3/15/2022— — — — 3,977 3$416,631 — — 
3/15/2022— — — — — — 9,695 7$1,015,648 
3/15/2023— — — — 18,411 3$1,928,736 — — 
3/15/2023— — — — — — 55,234 8$5,786,314 
James O. Hearty6/20/201950,000 — $52.41 6/20/2024— — — — 
3/15/20204,608 24,609 2$75.95 3/15/2025— — — — 
3/15/2021— 5,875 2$108.93 3/15/2026— — — — 
3/15/2022— 5,784 2$110.63 3/15/2027— — — — 
3/15/2020— — — — 1,152 3$120,684 — — 
3/15/2020— — — — 2,555 4$267,662 1,152 5$120,684 
3/15/2021— — — — 1,469 3$153,892 — — 
3/15/2021— — — — — — 1,927 6$201,873 
3/15/2022— — — — 1,446 3$151,483 — — 
3/15/2022— — — — — — 3,525 7$369,279 
3/15/2023— — — — 7,365 3$771,557 — — 
3/15/2023— — — — — — 22,094 8$2,314,567 
1The market value of shares or units of stock that have not vested reflects the $104.76 per share closing price of our Common Stock on December 29, 2023, the last trading day of the year, as reported by the NYSE.
2These SSARs vest 50% each on the third and fourth anniversaries of the grant date.
3These RSUs vest 50% each on the third and fourth anniversaries of the grant date.
4These PSUs vested 100% on March 15, 2024.
5These PSUs vested 100% on March 15, 2024. The amounts listed here reflect the shares that may be earned upon achievement of the maximum Relative TSR performance criterion.
6These PSUs vested 28.6% on March 15, 2024 and vest 71.4% on March 15, 2025, subject to the achievement of the performance conditions for the PSUs. The amounts listed here reflect the shares that may be earned upon achievement of the threshold Adjusted Earnings per Share performance criterion and target Relative TSR performance criteria.
7These PSUs vest 38.5% on March 15, 2025 and 61.5% on March 15, 2026, subject to the achievement of the performance conditions for the PSUs. The amounts listed here reflect the shares that may be earned upon achievement of the performance criterion at threshold for the 2024 Adjusted Earnings per Share, target for the 2025 Adjusted Earnings per Share and target for the Relative TSR performance criteria.
8These PSUs vest 100% on March 15, 2026, subject to achievement of the performance conditions for the PSUs. The amounts listed here reflect the shares that may be earned upon achievement of the maximum performance criteria.
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2023 Option Exercises and Stock Vested Table
The following table sets forth information concerning the exercise of SSARs (which are treated as options for this table), and the vesting of stock awards held by each of the NEOs during 2023.
 
 Option Awards
Stock Awards
NameNumber of Shares Acquired on Exercise (#)
Value Realized on Exercise ($)1
Number of Shares Acquired on Vesting (#)
Value Realized on Vesting ($)2
Javier J. Rodriguez218,573 $23,537,174 93,627 $9,068,711 
Joel Ackerman19,247 $1,938,616 49,855 $4,626,377 
Michael D. Staffieri83,406 $8,400,713 54,420 $4,967,253 
Kathleen A. Waters30,972 $3,142,383 29,840 $2,686,724 
James O. Hearty8,982 $904,683 12,784 $1,167,012 
1Value realized on exercise is determined by subtracting the exercise or base price from the applicable closing stock price at exercise, as reported by the NYSE, and multiplying the remainder by the number of shares exercised.
2Value realized on vesting is determined by multiplying the number of shares underlying RSUs or PSUs by the closing stock price on the date of vesting, as reported by the NYSE.
No Pension Benefits
The Company does not sponsor or maintain a defined benefit pension plan that provides for payments or other benefits at, following, or in connection with retirement for any teammate, including the NEOs.
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation
The following table sets forth information concerning the Company’s Deferred Compensation Plan, a nonqualified deferred compensation plan.
2023 Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Table
Name
Executive
Contributions
in Last FY
($)1,2
Registrant
Contributions
in Last FY
($)
Aggregate Earnings in
Last FY
($)3
Aggregate Withdrawals/
Distributions
($)
Aggregate
Balance at
Last FYE
($)
Javier J. Rodriguez— — $202,492 — $1,234,848 
Joel Ackerman— — $229,374 — $1,746,654 
Michael D. Staffieri4
— — — — — 
Kathleen A. Waters$281,003 — $185,412 — $1,729,196 
James O. Hearty4
— — — — — 
1These amounts are reported in the “Salary” and "Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation" columns in the 2023 Summary Compensation Table.
2Ms. Waters deferred $127,162 and $314,853 in 2022 and 2021, respectively.
3None of the earnings in this column are included in the 2023 Summary Compensation Table because they are not preferential or above market.
4Mr. Staffieri and Mr. Hearty did not participate in any of the Company’s nonqualified deferred compensation plans in 2023 or in any prior years.
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Executive Compensation
Deferred Compensation Plan
The 2023 Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Table presents amounts deferred under our Deferred Compensation Plan.
Contributions
Under the Deferred Compensation Plan (effective for deferrals in 2015 and later years), participants may defer (i) up to 50% of their base salary, and (ii) all or a portion of their annual incentive payment that is earned in the same year as their base salary but payable in the following year.
Under the plan, deferred amounts are credited with earnings or losses based on the rate of return of one or more investment alternatives selected by the participant from among the investment funds selected by the Company.
Participants may change their investment elections daily. We do not make company contributions to participants’ accounts under the Deferred Compensation Plan. All participant contributions are irrevocably funded into a rabbi trust for the benefit of those participants. Assets held in the trust are subject to the claims of the Company’s general creditors in the event of the Company’s bankruptcy or insolvency until paid to the plan participants.
Payment of Benefits
Distributions are generally paid out in cash at the participant’s election. Under the Deferred Compensation Plan, distributions can be made commencing in the second year following the year to which the deferral election applies, after separation from service, or on any other scheduled payment date, and participants can elect to receive either a lump sum distribution or annual installments over any period from two to twenty years; provided, that, if the Deferred Compensation Plan balance does not exceed $20,000, a lump sum will be paid. If the participant has not elected a specified year for payout and the participant has a separation from service, distributions generally will be paid in a lump sum cash distribution after separation from service.
In the event of a participant’s unforeseeable emergency, the plan administrator may, in its sole discretion, authorize the cessation of deferrals by a participant and provide for immediate distribution to a participant in the form of a lump sum cash payment to cover the unforeseeable emergency.
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change of Control
Employment Agreements and Severance Plan
Pursuant to the terms of his employment agreement, if Mr. Rodriguez's employment is terminated by the Company without cause or he resigns for good reason (each, a "Qualifying Termination"), then he will be entitled to receive (i) any bonus earned and payable but not yet paid for the fiscal year prior to the year in which the termination occurs, (ii) a payment equal to the product of (x) two (three in the case of a Qualifying Termination within two years after a change in control) (the "Severance Multiple"), and (y) the sum of his base salary in effect as of the date of termination and the average of the annual incentive bonus earned for the last two fiscal years before the fiscal year in which the termination occurs (the "Prior Bonus"), payable in installments or, in the case of a Qualifying Termination within two years after a change of control, in a lump sum, (iii) a prorated annual incentive bonus for the fiscal year in which the termination occurs (based on the actual bonus earned under the objective standards set for such year), (iv) continued health benefits at active teammate rates for a number of years equal to the Severance Multiple, subject to earlier termination in the event Mr. Rodriguez accepts full-time employment with another employer, and (v) the use of an office and services of an administrative assistant for a number of years equal to the Severance Multiple or until Mr. Rodriguez obtains other full-time employment. These payments are subject to forfeiture and repayment in the event that Mr. Rodriguez breaches the non-compete, non-solicit, non-disparagement or confidentiality covenants contained in his employment agreement.
Under the terms of their employment agreements, with respect to Messrs. Ackerman and Staffieri and Ms. Waters, and the DaVita Inc. Severance Plan for Directors and Above (the "Severance Plan"), with respect to Mr. Hearty, if their employment is terminated by the Company for any reason other than death, disability or material cause (or, in the case of Mr. Ackerman, if he resigns for good reason), then they would be entitled to receive (i) the benefits set forth in the Severance Plan, pursuant to the terms and conditions of the plan in effect at the time of termination (i.e.,
57


base salary continuation for a period of one year, reduced dollar-for-dollar by the amount of any compensation received from another employer during the severance period), and (ii) with respect to Mr. Ackerman, (A) a bonus in the amount he received for the previous year, pro-rated based on the number of months served in the year of termination, and (B) continued health benefits at active teammate rates for 18 months or until Mr. Ackerman becomes eligible to receive substantially similar coverage from another employer or other source.
In the event that Mr. Staffieri or Ms. Waters resigns for good cause, then they would be entitled to receive (i) in the case of Mr. Staffieri, base salary continuation for a period of one year (two years in the event of a resignation within 60 days following a good cause event after a change in control) and, in the case of Ms. Waters, the benefits set forth in the Severance Plan, pursuant to the terms and conditions of the plan in effect at the time of termination (but in no event less than base salary continuation for one year), and (ii) if their employment is terminated after April in a given year, a lump-sum payment equal to the bonus paid in the year prior to the year in which the termination occurs, pro-rated for the number of months served in the year of termination.
If Mr. Ackerman's employment is terminated by the Company or any reason other than death, disability or material cause or if he resigns for good reason, in each case, within 12 months following a change of control, then he would be entitled to receive (i) a lump-sum payment equal to two times the sum of his base salary and an amount equal to the bonus received for the year prior to the year in which the termination occurs, and (ii) continued health benefits at active teammate rates for 18 months or until Mr. Ackerman becomes eligible to receive substantially similar coverage from another employer or other source.
Other Severance Payments and Benefits
In the event of termination as a result of death, the estates of the NEOs will also receive the proceeds of the respective term life insurance policy for each NEO. The coverage amount for each NEO is as follows: $1,200,000 for Mr. Rodriguez; $500,000 for Mr. Ackerman; $700,000 for Mr. Staffieri; $500,000 for Ms. Waters; and $500,000 for Mr. Hearty. The amounts are generally equal to one times the base salary of the NEO at the time of benefits elections, subject to certain caps.
The Company does not provide for tax gross-ups in any employment agreements. Mr. Rodriguez's employment agreement provides that in the event that payments to Mr. Rodriguez would be subject to the excise tax imposed by Section 4999 of the Code, then the payments would be either (i) reduced so that no portion of the payments would be subject to such excise tax, or (ii) paid in full, whichever produces the better net after-tax position to the executive.
To receive the severance payments and benefits described above, each NEO must execute the Company’s standard severance and general release agreement. In addition, the existing employment agreements with each of our NEOs include confidentiality provisions that would apply until the confidential information becomes publicly available (other than through breach by the NEO). These employment agreements generally also include, among other things, nonsolicitation provisions which prohibit each NEO from soliciting any patient or customer of the Company to patronize a competing dialysis facility or from soliciting any patient, customer, supplier or physician to terminate their business relationship with the Company, for a period of two years following the termination of the NEO’s employment. Further, as a condition of receiving the severance benefits described above, Ms. Waters must, during the period of time when she is receiving such benefits, (i) make herself available to answer questions and cooperate in the transition of her duties, (ii) respond to any inquiries from the Company's compliance department, including making herself available for interview, and (iii) cooperate with the Company in the prosecution and/or defense of any claim, including making herself available for any interview, appearing at depositions, and producing requested documents. The Company will reimburse Ms. Waters for any out-of-pocket expenses she may incur.
Severance Payments and Benefits
The following tables and summary set forth the Company’s payment obligations pursuant to the terms of the employment or severance arrangements with each of our NEOs, under the circumstances described below, assuming that his or her employment had been terminated on December 31, 2023. For a description of the value of stock-based awards held by Messrs. Rodriguez, Ackerman, Staffieri, and Hearty and Ms. Waters that are subject to accelerated vesting upon a termination of employment, see the subsection titled “— Accelerated Vesting of Stock-Based Awards” below.
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Executive Compensation
Payment of Base Salary (or multiple thereof) for a specified period following terminationBonusContinued Health Benefits for a Specified Period Following TerminationOffice and Administrative Assistance
Total Value1
Javier J. Rodriguez
Death$— $— 2$— $— $— 
Disability$— $— 2$— $— $— 
Involuntary Termination Without Cause$5,917,604 3$4,208,063 4$51,978 5$253,220 6$10,430,865 
Resignation for Good Reason$5,917,604 3$4,208,063 4$51,978 5$253,220 6$10,430,865 
Resignation for Good Reason or by the Company Without Cause after a Change of Control$8,876,406 3$4,208,063 4$77,967 5$384,598 6$13,547,034 
Joel Ackerman
Involuntary Termination Without Material Cause$700,000 7$489,085 8$36,716 9$— $1,225,801 
Resignation for Good Cause$700,000 7$489,085 8$36,716 9$— $1,225,801 
Resignation Following a Good Cause Event or by the Company Without Material Cause after a Change of Control$1,400,000 10$489,085 11$36,716 9$— $1,925,801 
Michael D. Staffieri
Involuntary Termination Without Material Cause$800,000 7$— $— $— $800,000 
Resignation for Good Cause$800,000 7$684,720 8$— $— $1,484,720 
Resignation in connection with a Change of Control$1,600,000 10$684,720 8$— $— $2,284,720 
Kathleen A. Waters
Involuntary Termination Without Material Cause$700,000 7$— $— $— $700,000 
Resignation for Good Cause$700,000 7$423,874 8$— $— $1,123,874 
James O. Hearty
Involuntary Termination Without Material Cause$500,000 7$— $— $— $500,000 
1Does not include any amounts payable to Mr. Rodriguez, Mr. Ackerman or Ms. Waters pursuant to our Deferred Compensation Plan which amounts are included in the 2023 Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Table as such amounts are currently vested.
2Mr. Rodriguez (or his estate) will be entitled to receive the amount of any bonus earned and payable but not yet paid for the fiscal year prior to the year in which the termination occurs. As of December 31, 2023, Mr. Rodriguez had fully earned and received his bonus for 2022, the fiscal year prior to the year of assumed termination and accordingly, no bonus amount for Mr. Rodriguez is included in the table above.
3Mr. Rodriguez will be entitled to receive a lump-sum payment equal to the product of (x) the applicable Severance Multiple, and (y) the sum of his base salary in effect as of the date of termination and the Prior Bonus. The amount reported in the table above reflects the product of (x) the applicable Severance Multiple, and (y) the sum of Mr. Rodriguez’s base salary as of December 31, 2023, which was $1,500,000, and the average of Mr. Rodriguez’s 2022 annual incentive bonus in the amount of $1,173,805 and Mr. Rodriguez’s 2021 annual incentive bonus in the amount of $1,743,799.
4Mr. Rodriguez will be entitled to receive the amount of any bonus earned and payable but not yet paid for the fiscal year prior to the year in which the termination occurs. Mr. Rodriguez will also be entitled to receive a prorated annual incentive bonus (based on the actual bonus earned under the objective standards set forth under the 2020 Plan for the fiscal year in which the termination occurs) through and including the date of termination. Because Mr. Rodriguez had served for the entire year, there would have been no pro-rata reduction upon a termination as of December 31, 2023 and this amount reflects his 2023 annual incentive bonus as reported in the 2023 Summary Compensation Table.
5Mr. Rodriguez will continue to receive his health benefits for a number of years equal to the applicable Severance Multiple, subject to earlier termination in the event Mr. Rodriguez accepts full-time employment with another employer. The amount reported in the table above is the estimated actual cost of COBRA insurance premiums for Mr. Rodriguez for the applicable period, based on current insurance premium costs.
6Mr. Rodriguez will be entitled to the use of an office and services of an administrative assistant for a number of years equal to the applicable Severance Multiple or until he obtains other full-time employment. The amount above reflects the estimated costs to us of providing the continued salary for an administrative assistant's services for the applicable period based on the Company's current salary and benefits costs and assuming that Mr. Rodriguez utilizes such services for the full period. Mr. Rodriguez also receives use of an office space; however, there is no additional cost associated with these items as the assumption is that he would use a Company office.
7The executive will be entitled to receive the executive's salary for the one-year period following termination. As of December 31, 2023, the base salaries for the NEOs participating in the Severance Plan were as follows: Mr. Ackerman — $700,000; Mr. Staffieri — $800,000; Ms. Waters — $700,000; and Mr. Hearty — $500,000. Such payment obligation will be reduced dollar-for-dollar by the amount of any compensation received by the executive from another employer during the severance period, and the executive is obligated to use reasonable efforts to find employment during such period.
8Represents a lump sum payment equal to the bonus paid in the year prior to the termination, prorated for the number of months served in the year the executive's employment is terminated. The Company interprets this severance provision to mean the severance is based on the bonus paid “for” the year prior to the year for which a bonus was most recently earned. This severance amount is reported as the bonus paid to the executive for 2022.
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9Mr. Ackerman will continue to receive his health benefits for the 18-month period following his termination without material cause or resignation for good cause, subject to earlier termination in the event Mr. Ackerman accepts full-time employment with another employer. The amount reported in the table above is the estimated actual cost of COBRA insurance premiums for Mr. Ackerman for the 18-month period following termination, based on current insurance premium costs.
10Represents a lump sum payment equal to two times the sum of the executive's base salary in effect as of the date of termination. The amount reported in the table above for Messrs. Ackerman and Staffieri reflects two times their base salaries of $700,000 and $800,000, respectively, as of December 31, 2023.
11Represents a lump sum payment equal to the bonus paid in the year prior to the termination. This severance amount is reported as the bonus paid to Mr. Ackerman for 2022.
Accelerated Vesting of Stock-Based Awards
Termination in Connection with a Change of Control or Acquiror Fails to Assume Awards
For grants and awards of SSARs, PSUs and/or RSUs to our NEOs, the stock-based award agreements provide that in the event that either (i) in connection with a change of control, the acquiring entity fails to assume, convert or replace the NEO’s options or awards, or (ii) the NEO’s employment is terminated within the twenty-four-month period following a change of control by the Company (or the acquiring entity) other than for cause or, if applicable, by the NEO in accordance with the termination for good reason provisions of the NEO’s employment agreement, if any, then, in any such case, the SSAR, PSU or RSU awards will automatically vest and become immediately exercisable in their entirety, with such vesting to be effective as of immediately prior to the effective date of the change of control in the case of (i), and as of the date of termination of the NEO’s employment in the case of (ii). For grants of PSUs, upon a change of control, all PSU performance metrics in which the performance period has not completed, are converted to a Relative TSR metric. The number of shares issuable are then determined based on the Company’s Relative TSR performance (as described in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis) based on an ending average price period of the 30 calendar days immediately preceding the change of control. While Mr. Rodriguez's CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award fully vested in November 2023 and remains subject to the five-year holding period described above, such holding period will lapse upon the occurrence of a change of control.
The table below sets forth the value of the Company’s obligations upon the automatic vesting of the stock-based awards of our NEOs as described above and assumes that the triggering event took place on December 31, 2023.
 
Name
Value of SSARs1
Value of Stock Awards2
Javier J. Rodriguez$— $— 
Joel Ackerman$1,137,995 $12,865,995 
Michael D. Staffieri$1,706,993 $19,812,840 
Kathleen A. Waters$379,341 $10,936,002 
James O. Hearty$132,785 $4,220,254 
1Values are based on the aggregate difference between the respective base prices and the closing sale price of our Common Stock on December 29, 2023 (last trading day of the year), which was $104.76 per share, as reported by the NYSE.
2Values are based on the aggregate number of shares underlying PSUs and RSUs multiplied by the closing sale price of our Common Stock on December 29, 2023, which was $104.76 per share, as reported by the NYSE. For PSUs, performance through December 31, 2023 was used to determine the shares that would vest upon a termination in connection with a change of control or, in the event the acquiror does not assume the awards, upon a change of control. Per the award agreements, all PSU performance metrics in which the performance period has not completed, convert to a Relative TSR performance metric upon a change of control.
Rule of 65 Vesting
For grants and awards of SSARs, RSUs and/or PSUs to our NEOs, the award agreements provide that an executive officer who has achieved a minimum age of 55 and a minimum of five years of continuous service with the Company receive certain benefits with respect to outstanding equity awards upon a qualifying retirement if the sum of age plus years of service is greater than or equal to 65. In the event of a qualifying retirement under the award agreements (i) SSARs will become exercisable in accordance with the normal vesting schedules set forth in the underlying award agreements, as if the eligible officer had not separated from service, and remain exercisable until the normal expiration dates set forth in the underlying award agreements, (ii) RSUs will remain outstanding and will continue to vest in accordance with the original vesting schedule set forth in the underlying award agreements, and (iii) PSUs will remain eligible to vest, as if the eligible officer had not separated from service, based on actual performance during the applicable performance period, with any unvested PSUs to be settled within 60 days following the expiration of the applicable performance period.
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As of December 31, 2023, Mr. Ackerman and Mr. Hearty were the only NEOs who were retirement-eligible under the award agreements. The table below sets forth the value of the Company’s obligations upon the automatic vesting of the stock-based awards of our retirement-eligible NEOs as described above and assumes that the triggering event took place on December 31, 2023.
 
Name
Value of SSARs1
Value of Stock Awards2
Javier J. Rodriguez$— $— 
Joel Ackerman$1,137,995 $10,391,879 
Michael D. Staffieri$— $— 
Kathleen A. Waters$— $— 
James O. Hearty$132,785 $3,425,862 
1Values are based on the aggregate difference between the respective base prices and the closing sale price of our Common Stock on December 29, 2023 (last trading day of the year), which was $104.76 per share, as reported by the NYSE.
2Values are based on the aggregate number of shares underlying PSUs and RSUs multiplied by the closing sale price of our Common Stock on December 29, 2023, which was $104.76 per share, as reported by the NYSE. For PSUs, the aggregate number of shares used in the calculation are based on target performance.
Other Termination Events
The table below sets forth the value of the Company’s obligations upon the automatic vesting of the stock-based awards of our NEOs in the event of death or disability and assumes that the triggering event took place on December 31, 2023.
Name
Value of SSARs1
Value of Stock Awards2
Javier J. Rodriguez$— $— 
Joel Ackerman$1,137,995 $10,391,879 
Michael D. Staffieri$1,706,993 $15,932,529 
Kathleen A. Waters$379,341 $8,987,151 
James O. Hearty$132,785 $3,425,862 
1Values are based on the aggregate difference between the respective base prices and the closing sale price of our Common Stock on December 29, 2023 (the last trading day of the year) for the relevant awards, which was $104.76 per share, as reported by the NYSE.
2Values are based on the aggregate number of shares underlying PSUs (at target except for PSU performance metrics in which the performance period has completed) and RSUs for the relevant awards, multiplied by the closing sale price of our Common Stock on December 29, 2023, which was $104.76 per share, as reported by the NYSE.
The Company's equity award agreements with the NEOs generally provide for full vesting in the event of death or disability, with PSUs (excluding those with performance metrics in which the performance period has completed) vesting at their target number of shares, and do not provide for any accelerated vesting for a termination without cause or due to good reason absent a change of control of the Company. With respect to the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award, in the event of a termination without cause or termination due to good reason not in connection with a change of control, the shares acquired would remain subject to the five-year holding requirement of the award.
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Pay Ratio Disclosure
As required by Section 953(b) of Dodd-Frank, the Company is providing the following disclosure about the relationship of the annual total compensation of Mr. Rodriguez, our Chief Executive Officer, to the annual total compensation of our teammates.
Ratio
For 2023, based on the methodology described below:
The median of the annual total compensation of all of our teammates, other than Mr. Rodriguez, was $68,007.
As we have included the value of non-discriminatory benefits in the calculation of the median teammate’s annual total compensation, Mr. Rodriguez’s annual total compensation, as reported in the 2023 Summary Compensation Table, has been adjusted to also include the value of non-discriminatory benefits. As a result of the foregoing, Mr. Rodriguez’s annual total compensation was $6,735,936 for purposes of this calculation.
Based on the information above, the ratio of the annual total compensation of Mr. Rodriguez to the median of the annual total compensation of all teammates is estimated to be 99 to 1.1
We believe the SEC CEO Pay Ratio is a reasonable estimate calculated in a manner consistent with SEC rules based on our payroll and employment records and the methodology described below. The SEC rules for identifying the median compensated employee allow companies to adopt a variety of methodologies, to apply certain exclusions, and to make reasonable estimates and assumptions that reflect their compensation practices. As such, the pay ratio reported by other companies may not be comparable to the SEC CEO Pay Ratio reported above, as other companies may have different employment and compensation practices and may utilize different methodologies, exclusions, estimates and assumptions in calculating their own pay ratios.
Identification of Median Teammate
We had previously selected October 31, 2022 as the date on which to identify our median teammate for 2022 (such date, the "2022 determination date"). Since the 2022 determination date and through December 31, 2023, there have been no changes in the Company’s teammate population or teammate compensation arrangements that we believe would significantly impact the pay ratio disclosure and, accordingly, our pay ratio has been calculated utilizing the same median teammate from the 2022 determination date.
Our teammate population on the 2022 determination date consisted of 70,361 individuals, of which 57,677 were in the U.S. and 12,684 were outside the U.S. We excluded from the pay ratio calculation certain teammates based in non-U.S. jurisdictions as permitted by SEC rules.2 As a result, we used a total workforce of 67,980 teammates for the median teammate calculation, of which 57,677 were in the U.S. and 9,303 were outside the U.S.
For purposes of identifying the median teammate from our teammate population base, we considered gross income, including pre-tax contributions to the Company's 401(k) and health and welfare plans, as compiled from our payroll and benefits records. We selected this measure as it captures the principal forms of compensation delivered to all of our teammates and this information is readily available with respect to our teammates. In addition, we measured compensation for purposes of determining the median teammate using the 12-month period ending on the 2022
1 Mr. Rodriguez’s annual total compensation for 2023 reflects the fact that he did not receive an equity grant in 2023, since the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award that he received in 2019 was intended to replace five years (from the date the Board approved the grant) of awards to Mr. Rodriguez. The Company has also calculated an alternate pay ratio including an annualized figure for Mr. Rodriguez’s CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award, using one-fifth of the grant date fair value of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award to reflect the intended five-year term of the award, and adding that amount to his reported 2023 compensation. When calculated in this manner, the alternative pay ratio is estimated to be 300 to 1.
2 Relying on this rule, which permits such exclusions so long as we do not exclude more than 5% of our total teammates, we excluded a total of 3,381 teammates in the following jurisdictions in 2022: Poland (1,426); Portugal (516); Colombia (1,176); Netherlands (3); and United Kingdom (260).    
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determination date. Compensation paid in foreign currencies was converted to U.S. dollars based on a weighted average exchange rate for the relevant period.
In determining the annual total compensation of the median teammate, such teammate’s compensation was calculated in accordance with Item 402(c)(2)(x) of Regulation S-K, as required pursuant to the SEC executive compensation disclosure rules, provided that we also, as permitted by those rules, included the value of certain non-discriminatory benefits. Variability in the value of these non-discriminatory benefits year-over-year may drive similar variability in the annual total compensation of the median teammate.
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Pay Versus Performance

Pursuant to Section 953(a) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and Item 402(v) of Regulation S-K, the Pay Versus Performance Table (set forth below) is required to include “compensation actually paid” ("CAP"), as calculated per SEC disclosure rules, to the Company’s principal executive officer (“PEO”) and the Company’s non-PEO NEOs, as noted below. “Compensation actually paid” represents a new required calculation of compensation that differs significantly from the Summary Compensation Table calculation of compensation, the NEO’s realized or earned compensation, as well as from the way in which the Compensation Committee views annual compensation decisions, as discussed in the CD&A. The amounts in the table below are calculated in accordance with SEC rules and do not represent amounts actually earned or realized by NEOs, including with respect to SSARs, RSUs and PSUs, which remain subject to forfeiture if the vesting conditions are not satisfied.
Year 1
Summary Compensation Table Total for PEO 2
($)
Compensation Actually Paid to PEO 3
($)
Average Summary Compensation Table Total for Non-PEO NEOs 2
($)
Average Compensation Actually Paid to Non-PEO NEOs 4
($)
Value of Initial Fixed $100 Investment Based On: 5
Net Income
($)
Adjusted Earnings per Share 7
($)
Total Shareholder Return
($)
Peer Group Total Shareholder Return 6
($)
(a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)(h)(i)
20236,712,328 4,811,039 6,408,000 14,576,297 139.62 124.34 956,978,000 8.19 
20222,984,581 (86,403,681)4,203,738 (8,601,804)99.52 118.22 781,643,000 7.13 
20213,298,439 (13,076,235)4,262,738 3,784,342 151.62 147.19 1,211,762,000 9.24 
202073,432,365 171,946,681 6,453,315 823,928,014 8156.47 133.81 994,677,000 7.82 
1.Javier J. Rodriguez served as the Company’s principal PEO for the entirety of 2023, 2022, 2021 and 2020 and the Company’s other NEOs for the applicable years were as follows:
2023: Joel Ackerman; Michael D. Staffieri; Kathleen A. Waters; and James O. Hearty.
2022: Joel Ackerman; Michael D. Staffieri; Kathleen A. Waters; and James O. Hearty.
2021: Joel Ackerman; Michael D. Staffieri; Kathleen A. Waters; and James O. Hearty.
2020: Kent Thiry; Joel Ackerman; Michael D. Staffieri; Kathleen A. Waters; and James O. Hearty.
2.Amounts reported in this column represent (i) the total compensation reported in the Summary Compensation Table for the applicable year in the case of Mr. Rodriguez and (ii) the average of the total compensation reported in the Summary Compensation Table for the applicable year for the Company’s NEOs for the applicable year other than the principal executive officer for such years.
3.Amounts reported in this column are calculated per the SEC disclosure rules to represent the compensation actually paid to Mr. Rodriguez as the Company’s Chief Executive Officer in the indicated fiscal years, based on his total compensation reported in the Summary Compensation Table for the indicated fiscal years and adjusted as shown in the table below:
PEO
2023202220212020
Summary Compensation Table - Total Compensation(a)$6,712,328 $2,984,581 $3,298,439 $73,432,365 
- Grant Date Fair Value of Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Fiscal Year(b)$ $ $ $(68,496,958)
+ Fair Value at Fiscal Year-End of Outstanding and Unvested Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Fiscal Year(c)$ $ $ $146,273,000 
+ Change in Fair Value of Outstanding and Unvested Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Prior Fiscal Years(d)$ $(43,928,697)$(17,202,972)$20,182,219 
+ Fair Value at Vesting of Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Fiscal Year That Vested During Fiscal Year(e)$ $ $ $ 
+ Change in Fair Value as of Vesting Date of Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Prior Fiscal Years For Which Applicable Vesting Conditions Were Satisfied During Fiscal Year(f)$(1,901,289)$(45,459,565)$828,298 $556,055 
- Fair Value as of Prior Fiscal Year-End of Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Prior Fiscal Years That Failed to Meet Applicable Vesting Conditions During Fiscal Year(g)$ $ $ $ 
= Compensation Actually Paid$4,811,039 $(86,403,681)$(13,076,235)$171,946,681 
(a)Represents Total Compensation as reported in the Summary Compensation Table for the indicated fiscal year.
(b)Represents the aggregate grant date fair value of the stock awards and option awards granted to Mr. Rodriguez during the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718.
(c)Represents the aggregate fair value as of the indicated fiscal year-end of Mr. Rodriguez’s outstanding and unvested stock awards and option awards granted during such fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718 and, for awards subject to performance-based vesting conditions, based on the probable outcome of such performance-based vesting conditions as of the last day of the fiscal year.
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(d)Represents the aggregate change in fair value during the indicated fiscal year of the outstanding and unvested stock awards and option awards held by Mr. Rodriguez as of the last day of the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718 and, for awards subject to performance-based vesting conditions, based on the probable outcome of such performance-based vesting conditions as of the last day of the fiscal year.
(e)Represents the aggregate fair value at vesting of the stock awards and option awards that were granted to Mr. Rodriguez and vested during the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718.
(f)Represents the aggregate change in fair value, measured from the prior fiscal year-end to the vesting date, of each stock award and option award held by Mr. Rodriguez that was granted in a prior fiscal year, and which vested during the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718.
(g)Represents the aggregate fair value as of the last day of the prior fiscal year of Mr. Rodriguez’s stock awards and option awards that were granted in a prior fiscal year and which failed to meet the applicable vesting conditions in the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718.
4.Amounts reported in this column represent the compensation actually paid to the Company’s NEOs other than Mr. Rodriguez in the indicated fiscal year, as calculated per the SEC disclosure rules based on the average total compensation for such NEOs reported in the Summary Compensation Table for the indicated fiscal year and adjusted as shown in the table below. The amounts reflected for fiscal years 2020-2022 have been revised from the amounts previously reported in last year's proxy statement in order to incorporate an administrative correction:
Other NEOs Average (a)
2023202220212020
Summary Compensation Table - Total Compensation(b)$6,408,000 $4,203,738 $4,262,738 $6,453,315 
- Grant Date Fair Value of Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Fiscal Year(c)$(4,338,381)$(3,030,532)$(2,869,513)$(2,304,672)
+ Fair Value at Fiscal Year-End of Outstanding and Unvested Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Fiscal Year(d)$8,695,914 $1,700,247 $3,485,674 $5,651,914 
+ Change in Fair Value of Outstanding and Unvested Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Prior Fiscal Years(e)$2,184,874 $(9,833,754)$(1,612,646)$11,383,596 
+ Fair Value at Vesting of Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Fiscal Year That Vested During Fiscal Year(f)$ $ $ $ 
+ Change in Fair Value as of Vesting Date of Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Prior Fiscal Years For Which Applicable Vesting Conditions Were Satisfied During Fiscal Year(g)$1,625,890 $(1,641,503)$518,089 $2,743,861 
- Fair Value as of Prior Fiscal Year-End of Stock Awards and Option Awards Granted in Prior Fiscal Years That Failed to Meet Applicable Vesting Conditions During Fiscal Year(h)$ $ $ $ 
= Compensation Actually Paid$14,576,297 $(8,601,804)$3,784,342 $23,928,014 
(a)Please see footnote 1 for the NEOs included in the average for each indicated fiscal year.
(b)Represents the average Total Compensation as reported in the Summary Compensation Table for the reported NEOs in the indicated fiscal year.
(c)Represents the average aggregate grant date fair value of the stock awards and option awards granted to the reported NEOs during the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718.
(d)Represents the average aggregate fair value as of the indicated fiscal year-end of the reported NEOs’ outstanding and unvested stock awards and option awards granted during such fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718 and, for awards subject to performance-based vesting conditions, based on the probable outcome of such performance-based vesting conditions as of the last day of the fiscal year.
(e)Represents the average aggregate change in fair value during the indicated fiscal year of the outstanding and unvested stock awards and option awards held by the reported NEOs as of the last day of the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718 and, for awards subject to performance-based vesting conditions, based on the probable outcome of such performance-based vesting conditions as of the last day of the fiscal year.
(f)Represents the average aggregate fair value at vesting of the stock awards and option awards that were granted to the reported NEOs and vested during the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718.
(g)Represents the average aggregate change in fair value, measured from the prior fiscal year-end to the vesting date, of each stock award and option award held by the reported NEOs that was granted in a prior fiscal year and which vested during the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718.
(h)Represents the average aggregate fair value as of the last day of the prior fiscal year of the reported NEOs’ stock awards and option awards that were granted in a prior fiscal year and which failed to meet the applicable vesting conditions in the indicated fiscal year, computed in accordance with FASB ASC 718.
5.Pursuant to rules of the SEC, the comparison assumes $100 was invested on December 31, 2019. Historic stock price performance is not necessarily indicative of future stock price performance.
6.The TSR Peer Group consists of the Standard & Poor’s Health Care Services Select Industry Index, an independently prepared index that includes companies in the healthcare industry.
7.As noted in the CD&A, for 2023, the Compensation Committee determined that Adjusted Earnings per Share continues to be viewed as a core driver of the Company’s performance and stockholder value creation and, accordingly, was utilized as a component in the 2023 LTI Program. “Adjusted Earnings per Share” is a non-GAAP financial measure that represents a per share measure of adjusted net income. Adjusted Earnings per Share represents our diluted net income per share attributable to DaVita Inc., adjusted as reported in our earnings release to exclude certain items from net income that we do not believe are indicative of our ordinary results of operations, including, among other things, impairment charges, earn-out revaluations, gains and losses on ownership changes, capacity closure charges, restructuring charges, IKC adjustments, accruals for legal matters and debt prepayment and refinancing charges, and further adjusted to exclude the impact of expenses associated with opposing ballot initiatives, as applicable. The amount reported for each reporting year in this table represents the Adjusted Earnings per Share calculated in accordance with the PSU awards granted during the applicable reporting year. Please see Annex A for a
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presentation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measure to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure.
8.Includes severance benefits received by our former Executive Chairman that were payable in 2020 in accordance with the terms of his employment agreement and which we do not view as representative of the Company's annual compensation program.
Relationship Between Pay and Performance
We believe the compensation actually paid, as calculated in accordance with SEC disclosure rules, in each of the years reported above and over the four-year cumulative period reflect the Compensation Committee’s emphasis on “pay-for-performance” as the compensation actually paid fluctuated year-over-year, primarily due to our stock performance and our varying levels of achievement against pre-established performance goals under our 2023 STI Program and 2023 LTI Program, including our Adjusted Earnings per Share performance. The CD&A describes in greater detail the Compensation Committee's emphasis on "pay-for-performance" and how our executive compensation program is designed to link executive compensation with the achievement of our financial and strategic objectives as well as stockholder value creation.
Because of the weighting of our executive compensation program towards long-term incentives through grants of some combination of PSUs, SSARs and RSUs, the compensation actually paid is most significantly impacted by changes in our stock price over the vesting period of those awards. In addition, this Pay Versus Performance disclosure is significantly impacted by the unique, up-front CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award granted to Mr. Rodriguez in connection with his 2019 transition to the CEO role, which was designed to incentivize long-term stockholder value creation, and is more fully described in the subsection titled "Compensation Discussion and Analysis — What We Pay and Why — CEO Compensation." Because of the up-front nature of the grant as well as its strong linkage to our stock price, the compensation actually paid to our CEO, as calculated per the SEC disclosure rules, has fluctuated significantly since the year of grant. The values shown as compensation actually paid for Mr. Rodriguez include the fair value of the award at the end of 2020 and 2021. The 2022 value shown includes the fair value at vesting of the first tranche and the fair value at the end of 2022 for the unvested tranche. The value shown for 2023 includes the fair value at vesting of the second tranche of the award. Due to the five-year mandatory holding period required under the terms of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award, Mr. Rodriguez cannot realize any value from any exercised portion of the CEO Premium-Priced SSAR Award until November 4, 2024, and the ultimate value realized by Mr. Rodriguez is highly uncertain and dependent upon the long-term sustainable value created for the Company's stockholders. Our Pay Versus Performance disclosure is also impacted by the severance benefits received by our former Executive Chairman in 2020 that were payable in accordance with the terms of his employment agreement and which we do not view as representative of the Company's annual compensation program. The following graph illustrates the relationship between pay and performance, as calculated per the SEC disclosure rules.

2023 PvP Graph v5.gif
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Tabular List of Financial Performance Measures

The following is a list of financial performance measures, which in the Company’s assessment represent the most important financial performance measures used by the Company to link compensation actually paid to the NEOs for 2023. In addition to these financial metrics, the Company's executive compensation program is impacted by our performance with respect to ESG goals and the achievement by the executive officers of customized objectives under the STI Program. Our ESG goals are included as a significant element of our STI Program because they collectively represent ESG criteria that are priorities for the Company. Please see the CD&A for further information regarding the following financial performance measures as well as the ESG and customized objectives used in the STI Program.

Four Most Important Financial Performance Measures for Determining NEO Compensation
Adjusted Earnings per Share
Free cash flow from continuing operations
Consolidated adjusted operating income
Total shareholder return
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Compensation of Directors
Compensation of Directors
The following table sets forth information concerning the compensation of our non-employee directors during 2023. Mr. Rodriguez serves as a member of our Board but, as an executive officer of the Company, Mr. Rodriguez does not receive any additional compensation for his services as a member of our Board.
2023 DIRECTOR COMPENSATION TABLE
Name
Fees Earned or Paid in Cash
($)1
Stock Awards
($)2
Total
($)
Pamela M. Arway$297,500 $199,959 $497,459 
Charles G. Berg$122,500 $199,959 $322,459 
Barbara J. Desoer$185,000 $199,959 $384,959 
Paul J. Diaz3
$77,610 $136,847 $214,457 
Jason M. Hollar$165,000 $199,959 $364,959 
Dr. Gregory J. Moore, M.D., Ph.D.$155,934 $199,959 $355,893 
John M. Nehra$145,000 $199,959 $344,959 
Adam H. Schechter
$135,000 $199,959 $334,959 
Wendy L. Schoppert4
$63,967 $42,889 $106,856 
Phyllis R. Yale$175,000 $199,959 $374,959 
1Consists of the amounts described below under the subsections “— Annual Retainers” and “— Meeting Fees”. With respect to Mr. Diaz, includes the prorated portion of the $12,500 second quarter cash retainer for service as Chair of the Compliance and Quality Committee and prorated portion of the $25,000 second quarter cash retainer in the total amount of $27,610. With respect to Mr. Hollar, includes the prorated portion of the $12,500 first quarter cash retainer for service as Chair of the Audit Committee in the amount of $2,500. With respect to Dr. Moore, includes the prorated portion of the $12,500 second quarter cash retainer for service as Chair of the Compliance and Quality Committee in the amount of $3,434. With respect to Mr. Nehra, includes the prorated portion of the $12,500 first quarter cash retainer for service as Chair of the Audit Committee in the amount of $10,000. With respect to Ms. Schoppert, includes the prorated portion of the $25,000 third quarter cash retainer in the amount of $21,467.
2The amounts reported in this column reflect the aggregate grant date fair value of all direct stock issuance awards ("DSI") granted to our non-employee directors during 2023 as estimated by the Company in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718. This includes four quarterly grants under the Director Compensation Policy (as defined below) granted on March 15, 2023, May 15, 2023, August 15, 2023, and November 15, 2023. Mr. Diaz received a prorated quarterly grant amount on his last day of board service, June 6, 2023. Ms. Schoppert received a prorated quarterly grant on November 15, 2023 for the quarter she joined the Board. See Note 17 to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in our 2023 Form 10-K for a discussion of the relevant assumptions used in calculating the grant date fair value pursuant to FASB ASC Topic 718. As of December 31, 2023, no non-employee director had any outstanding equity awards.
3Mr. Diaz stepped down from the Board, effective June 6, 2023.
4Ms. Schoppert was appointed to the Board, effective July 14, 2023.

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Compensation of Directors
Director Compensation
Our non-employee director compensation program, which is embodied in our non-employee director compensation policy (the “Director Compensation Policy”), is designed to attract and retain highly-qualified directors and to align the interests of our directors with the long-term interests of our stockholders. The Compensation Committee is responsible for recommending to the Board the compensation of our non-employee directors. As part of this process, the Compensation Committee reviews the compensation program for our non-employee directors no less than annually and considers input from its independent compensation consultant, Compensia, regarding general market practices on director compensation as well as comparative market data for our comparator peer group, which is the same peer group used for purposes of evaluating the competitiveness of our executive compensation program. The Compensation Committee also considers feedback received on our director compensation program through engagement with our stockholders.
The following describes the compensation paid to our non-employee directors for service as a director during 2023 under the Director Compensation Policy as set forth in the table above. Under the Director Compensation Policy, effective January 1, 2023, among other things, the value of the aggregate annual DSI grants increased by $10,000 (representing the first increase in the annual grant value since 2017), the annual retainer increased by $20,000 (representing the first increase in the annual retainer since 2014), and the Chair Retainer for the Nominating and Governance Committee was increased by $15,000 (so that it would align with the value of the retainer for Chairs of other Board committees). Directors who are current teammates or officers do not receive compensation for service on the Board or any committee of the Board.
Stock-Based Compensation
Annual Grant. Under the Director Compensation Policy, each of our non-employee directors is entitled to receive DSIs granted in four equal installments on March 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 (each, a "Grant Date"), in an amount determined by dividing $50,000 by the closing market price of our Common Stock on the applicable Grant Date, or if the Grant Date does not fall on a trading day, then the last trading day prior to the Grant Date. The DSIs shall be prorated, as applicable, including for new directors, based on the number of days of service on the Board.
Annual Retainers
Annual Retainer. Pursuant to the Director Compensation Policy, each of our non-employee directors was entitled to receive an annual retainer of $100,000 in cash per year, paid quarterly in arrears. The quarterly retainer due to a director elected during a quarter is prorated based on the days of service on the Board during the applicable calendar quarter.
Independent Chair Retainer. Pursuant to the Director Compensation Policy, a director serving as the independent Chair of the Board ("Independent Chair") receives an additional retainer of $175,000 in cash per year, paid quarterly in arrears, in light of the extra time commitment and responsibilities of the Independent Chair. The quarterly retainer due to the Independent Chair is to be prorated based on the number of days of service as Independent Chair during the applicable calendar quarter.
If the Independent Chair also serves as a chair of any committee of the Board, the Independent Chair will also be entitled to receive the additional retainer for serving as the chair of any such committee, in addition to the retainer he or she is entitled to receive as the Independent Chair.
Committee Chairs Retainer. Under the Director Compensation Policy, the chairs of the Audit, Compensation, Compliance and Quality, and Nominating and Governance Committees received an additional retainer of $50,000 in cash per year, each paid quarterly in arrears. The quarterly retainer due to a director elected or appointed to a Committee during a quarter is prorated based on the days of service as chair of a committee during the applicable calendar quarter.
Meeting Fees
Board Meetings. Under the Director Compensation Policy, our non-employee directors are not entitled to receive any additional compensation for regularly scheduled Board meetings.
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Compensation of Directors
Special Board Meetings. Non-employee directors are entitled to receive $2,500 in cash for attendance at a special meeting regardless of the duration of such meeting, unless the meeting is held telephonically, in which case the meeting must last at least approximately one hour.
Committee Meetings. For committee meetings, non-employee directors who are committee members or whose participation was requested by the chair of a committee are entitled to receive additional compensation of $2,500 in cash for attendance regardless of the duration of such meetings, unless it is a special committee meeting held telephonically, in which case the meeting must last at least approximately one hour. In the case of Audit Committee meetings related to quarterly earnings releases, additional compensation of $2,500 in cash for each such meeting is paid regardless of the duration of such meetings.
Expense Reimbursement and Per Diem Compensation
Expense Reimbursement. Under the Director Compensation Policy, we reimburse our directors for their reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with their travel to and attendance at meetings of the Board or any committee thereof and other Board-related business.
Per Diem Compensation. Additionally, under the Director Compensation Policy, we compensate our non-employee directors on a per diem, hourly or other basis at a rate that is reasonable and fair to the Company as determined at the discretion of the Independent Chair, the Board or the Compensation Committee, as applicable, for significant time spent outside of Board or committee meetings or for meetings or activities outside the scope of normal Board duties, including director training, meeting with Company management or external auditors, interviewing director candidates or other activities deemed necessary by the Independent Chair, the Compensation Committee or the entire Board. If time expended is less than the full unit of time for which a payment rate has been set, the payment shall be made on a pro rata basis.
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Compensation Committee Interlocks and
Insider Participation
No member of the Compensation Committee has served as one of our officers or employees at any time. During 2023, none of our executive officers served as a member of the compensation committee or board of directors of any other company whose executive officer(s) served as a member of our Compensation Committee or Board.
Certain Relationships and Related
Person Transactions
We or one of our subsidiaries may occasionally enter into transactions with certain “related persons.” Related persons include our executive officers, directors, nominees for directors, more than 5% beneficial owners of our Common Stock and immediate family members of these persons. We refer to any transaction, arrangement or relationship or any series of similar transactions, arrangements or relationships, in which: (i) the aggregate amount involved will or may be expected to exceed $120,000 in any fiscal year; (ii) the Company or any of its consolidated subsidiaries is or will be a participant; and (iii) a related person has a direct or indirect material interest, as “related person transactions.” Each related person transaction must be approved in accordance with the Company’s written Related Person Transaction Policy by our Audit Committee or, if our Audit Committee determines that the approval of such related person transaction should be considered by all disinterested members of the Board, by the vote of a majority of such disinterested members.
When determining whether to approve a related person transaction, the Audit Committee or the disinterested members of the Board shall consider all relevant information available concerning the related person transaction, including, without limitation, the following:
the size of the transaction and the amount payable to a related person;
the nature of the interest of the related person in the transaction;
whether the transaction may involve a conflict of interest;
whether the transaction was undertaken in the ordinary course of business of the Company;
whether the transaction involves the provision of goods or services to the Company that are available from unaffiliated third parties and, if so, whether the transaction is on terms and made under circumstances that are at least as favorable to the Company as would be available in comparable transactions with or involving unaffiliated third parties; and
any other information regarding the transaction or related person that would be material to investors in light of the circumstances of the transaction.
There were no related person transactions from January 1, 2023 through the date of this Proxy Statement required to be disclosed pursuant to Item 404(a) of Regulation S-K.
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Audit Committee Report
The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors (the "Audit Committee") is responsible for providing independent, objective oversight of the Company’s accounting functions and internal controls. The Audit Committee is composed of four directors, each of whom is independent as defined by New York Stock Exchange listing standards. The Audit Committee operates under a written charter approved by the Board of Directors.
The Audit Committee is directly responsible for the appointment and compensation of the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm, KPMG LLP ("KPMG"), as well as monitoring the independence, qualifications and performance of KPMG and the scope and effectiveness of the Company’s internal audit function. In addition, the Audit Committee has considered whether the provision of non-audit services to the Company by KPMG is compatible with maintaining KPMG’s independence.
Management is responsible for internal controls and the financial reporting process. The independent registered public accounting firm is responsible for performing an independent audit of the Company’s consolidated financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) ("PCAOB") and an audit of the effectiveness of internal controls over financial reporting. The Audit Committee’s responsibility is to monitor and oversee these processes.
The Audit Committee has met and held discussions with the Company’s internal auditors and KPMG, with and without management present, to discuss the scope of their audit plans, results of their examinations, their evaluations of the Company’s internal controls, and the overall quality of the Company’s financial reporting.
The Audit Committee engaged KPMG to conduct the independent audit for the year ended December 31, 2023. The Audit Committee reviewed and discussed with management the Company's audited consolidated financial statements, as of and for the year ended December 31, 2023. The Audit Committee also discussed with KPMG the matters required to be reviewed and discussed by applicable requirements of the PCAOB and the Securities and Exchange Commission. In addition, the Audit Committee received the written disclosures and the letter from KPMG required by applicable requirements of the PCAOB regarding KPMG's communications with the Audit Committee concerning independence, and has discussed with KPMG their independence.
Based upon the Audit Committee’s reviews and discussions, referred to above, the Audit Committee recommended to the Board of Directors, and the Board of Directors approved, that the audited consolidated financial statements referred to above be included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023 for filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

Jason M. Hollar, Chair
Barbara J. Desoer
Adam H. Schechter
Wendy L. Schoppert







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Stockholder Proposals and Nominations for 2025 Annual Meeting
If you wish to present a proposal for action at the 2025 Annual Meeting and wish to have it included in the Proxy Statement and form of proxy that management will prepare, you must notify us no later than December 20, 2024 in the form required under the rules and regulations promulgated by the SEC. Otherwise, your proposal will not be included in management’s proxy materials.
Our Bylaws include provisions permitting, subject to certain terms and conditions, stockholders or groups of stockholders who have continuously owned at least 3% of the outstanding shares of the Company’s Common Stock for at least three consecutive years to use management’s proxy materials to nominate a number of director candidates not to exceed the greater of two or 20% of the number of directors then in office, subject to reduction in certain circumstances. If you wish to nominate a director for election at the 2025 Annual Meeting and wish to have the nominee included in the Proxy Statement and form of proxy that management will prepare, you must notify us no later than the close of business December 20, 2024, and no earlier than the close of business November 20, 2024. However, if we hold our 2025 Annual Meeting more than 30 days before or more than 70 days after the one-year anniversary of the date that the Company first mailed this Proxy Statement, you must notify us: (i) not earlier than the close of business on the 150th day prior to the 2025 Annual Meeting and (ii) not later than the close of business on the later of the 120th day prior to such annual meeting or the 10th day following the day on which public announcement of the date of the 2025 Annual Meeting was first made. Otherwise, your nominee will not be included in management’s proxy materials. If you wish to present a proposal for action at the 2025 Annual Meeting, even though it will not be included in management’s proxy materials, or if you wish to nominate a director for election at the 2025 Annual Meeting outside of the proxy access provisions of our Bylaws, our Bylaws require that you must notify us no later than the close of business March 8, 2025, and no earlier than the close of business February 6, 2025. However, if we hold our 2025 Annual Meeting more than 30 days before or more than 70 days after the one-year anniversary of our 2024 Annual Meeting, you must notify us: (i) not earlier than the close of business on the 120th day prior to the 2025 Annual Meeting and (ii) not later than the close of business on the later of the 90th day prior to such annual meeting or the 10th day following the day on which public announcement of the date of the 2025 Annual Meeting was first made.
We advise you to review our Bylaws, which contain these and other requirements with respect to advance notice of stockholder proposals and director nominations, including certain information that must be included concerning the stockholder and each proposal or nominee. Our Bylaws are available under the Corporate Governance section of our website, located at www.davita.com/about/corporate-governance.
In addition, to comply with the universal proxy rules, stockholders who intend to solicit proxies in support of director nominees other than the Company’s nominees must provide notice that sets forth the information required by Rule 14a-19 under the Exchange Act no later than April 7, 2025.
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General Information
We are delivering this Proxy Statement in connection with the solicitation of proxies by the Board, for use at our Annual Meeting, which will be held on June 6, 2024, at 10:00 AM Mountain Time. The Annual Meeting will be a live audio webcast available at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/DVA2024, where you will be able to attend, vote your shares electronically and submit questions.
The proxies solicited for the Annual Meeting will remain valid for use at any meetings held upon adjournment or postponement of that meeting. The Record Date for the Annual Meeting is the close of business on April 10, 2024. All holders of record of our Common Stock on the Record Date are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting and any adjournment or postponement thereof.
To participate in the virtual Annual Meeting, you will need the 16-digit control number included on your Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials ("e-proxy notice"), proxy card or voting instruction form. The audio webcast will begin promptly at 10:00 AM Mountain Time. Online check-in will begin at 9:45 AM Mountain Time, and you should allow ample time for the check-in procedures. If you encounter any technical difficulties with the virtual meeting platform on the meeting day, please call the technical support number that will be posted on the Annual Meeting log in page at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/DVA2024.
If you wish to submit a question during the Annual Meeting, log into the virtual meeting platform beginning at 9:45 AM Mountain Time on the meeting day, type your question into the “Ask a Question” field, and click “Submit.” We intend to answer questions submitted by stockholders during the Annual Meeting that comply with the Annual Meeting rules of conduct, which will be posted on the virtual meeting platform.
We are using the "e-proxy" rules adopted by the SEC to furnish proxy materials to our stockholders over the Internet. Under the e-proxy rules, the e-proxy notice will be mailed on or about April 26, 2024 to our stockholders of record and beneficial owners of our Common Stock as of the Record Date, in lieu of a printed copy of our proxy materials. We believe using this e-proxy notice model allows us to reduce costs and helps reduce our carbon footprint.
If you receive an e-proxy notice by mail, you will not receive a printed copy of the proxy materials unless you have previously made a permanent election to receive these materials in paper copy. If you received an e-proxy notice by mail and would like to receive a printed copy of our proxy materials, you should follow the instructions for requesting such materials included in the e-proxy notice.
Whether or not you plan to virtually attend the Annual Meeting, we encourage you to vote prior to the Annual Meeting. Voting in advance will help ensure that your shares will be voted at the Annual Meeting.
Unless you instruct otherwise in your proxy, any proxy that is given and not revoked will be voted at the Annual Meeting:
FOR the election of the ten director nominees identified in this Proxy Statement each to serve until the 2025 Annual Meeting or until their successors are duly elected and qualified;
FOR the ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for fiscal year 2024;
FOR the approval, on an advisory basis, of the compensation of our NEOs; and
With regard to all other matters properly presented for a vote at the Annual Meeting, as determined by the Company Proxies in their best judgment.





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Voting Information 
Our only voting securities are the outstanding shares of our Common Stock. As of the Record Date, we had approximately 87,702,623 shares of Common Stock outstanding. Each stockholder of record as of the Record Date is entitled to one vote per share on each matter that we will consider at the Annual Meeting. Stockholders are not entitled to cumulate votes. Under the rules of the NYSE, your broker, bank or other nominee may not vote your uninstructed shares in the election of directors and certain other matters absent specific voting instructions. Thus, if you hold your shares in “street name,” meaning that your shares are registered in the name of your broker, bank or other nominee, and you do not instruct your broker, bank or other nominee how to vote, no votes will be cast on your behalf on any proposal other than the proposal for the ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for fiscal year 2024. The votes that the brokers would have cast if their customers had given them specific instructions are commonly called “broker non-votes.” If the stockholders of record present at the Annual Meeting or represented by their proxies and entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting hold at least a majority of our shares of Common Stock outstanding as of the Record Date, a quorum will exist for the transaction of business at the Annual Meeting. Stockholders virtually attending the Annual Meeting or represented by proxy at the Annual Meeting who abstain from voting and broker non-votes are counted as present for quorum purposes.
How to Vote
Shares of our Common Stock may be held directly in your own name or may be held beneficially through a broker, bank or other nominee in "street name." We have summarized below the distinctions between shares held of record and those owned beneficially.
Stockholder of Record — If your shares are registered directly in your name with our transfer agent, Computershare Trust Company, N.A., you are the stockholder of record with respect to those shares and we are providing proxy materials directly to you. As the stockholder of record, you have the right to vote online during the Annual Meeting or to grant your voting proxy to the persons designated by us or a person you select.
Beneficial Owner — If your shares are held in "street name" in a stock brokerage account or by a bank or other nominee, you are the beneficial owner of the shares, and you have been provided proxy materials from your broker, bank or other nominee, which is considered the stockholder of record with respect to the shares. As the beneficial owner, you have the right to direct the broker, bank or nominee on how to vote your shares and are also invited to virtually attend the Annual Meeting. Your broker, bank or nominee will provide you with a voting instruction form for you to use, which will also include a 16-digit control number that will allow you to access the Annual Meeting and vote your shares during the Annual Meeting.
Voting
Whether you hold our shares as a stockholder of record or as a beneficial owner, we encourage you to vote before the Annual Meeting. Most stockholders will have a choice of voting through the Internet or by telephone or, if you received a printed copy of the proxy materials, by completing a proxy card or voting instruction form and returning it in a postage-prepaid envelope. Please refer to the instructions below and in the e-proxy notice. If you are a Company teammate who holds shares of Common Stock through the DaVita Retirement Savings Plan (the "401(k) Plan"), certain earlier voting deadlines apply.

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Proxy Statement
Through the Internet
:
 
Prior to the Annual Meeting, you may vote through the Internet by going to www.proxyvote.com and following the instructions. You will need to have the e-proxy notice, or if you received a printed copy of the proxy materials, your proxy card or voting instruction form, available when voting through the Internet. If you want to vote through the Internet in advance of the meeting, you must do so prior to 11:59 PM Eastern Time, on Wednesday, June 5, 2024. If you vote through the Internet, you do not need to return a proxy card.
During the Annual Meeting, you may vote through the Internet by following the instructions at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/DVA2024. You will need to have your e-proxy notice, proxy card or voting instruction form available when you access the virtual Annual Meeting web page.
By Telephone
)
 
You may vote by touch tone telephone by calling 1-800-579-1639. You will need to have your e-proxy notice, or if you received a printed copy of the proxy materials, your proxy card or voting instruction form, available when voting by telephone. If you want to vote by telephone, you must do so prior to 11:59 PM Eastern Time, on Wednesday, June 5, 2024. If you vote by telephone, you do not need to return a proxy card.
By Mail
*
 
If you are a beneficial owner, you may vote by mail by signing and dating your voting instruction form provided by your broker, bank or nominee and mailing it in a postage-prepaid envelope. If you are a stockholder of record and you received a printed copy of our proxy materials, you may vote by signing and dating your proxy card and mailing it in a postage-prepaid envelope. If you are a stockholder of record and received the e-proxy notice, in order to obtain a proxy card, please follow the instructions on the e-proxy notice. If you want to vote by mail, the proxy card or voting instruction form must be received prior to 11:59 PM Eastern Time, on Wednesday, June 5, 2024.

Teammate 401(k) Stockholders — If you participate in the 401(k) Plan and you are invested in our Common Stock fund in your account, you may give voting instructions to the 401(k) Plan trustee with respect to the share equivalents credited to your account. The plan trustee will vote your shares in accordance with your instructions received by June 3, 2024 at 11:59 PM Eastern Time. You may also revoke previously given voting instructions by June 3, 2024 at 11:59 PM Eastern Time, by filing with the plan trustee either written notice of revocation or a properly completed and signed voting instruction form bearing a later date. If you do not send instructions for a proposal, the plan trustee will vote the number of shares equal to the share equivalents credited to your account in the same proportion that it votes shares for which it did receive timely instructions.
Changing Your Vote — If you are a stockholder of record or beneficial owner, you may change your vote at any time prior to the applicable voting deadline by voting again with your 16-digit control number. If you virtually attend the Annual Meeting, you will also be given the opportunity to vote or change your vote during the Annual Meeting through the virtual meeting platform at: www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/DVA2024. If you participate in the 401(k) Plan and you are invested in our Common Stock fund in your account, you may not change your vote after June 3, 2024 at 11:59 PM Eastern Time.
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Proxy Statement
Votes Required for Proposals.
ProposalVoting OptionsBoard RecommendationVote Required to Adopt the ProposalEffect of AbstentionsEffect of Broker Non-Votes*
Proposal 1: Election of the ten director nominees identified in this Proxy Statement to serve until our 2025 Annual Meeting.
For, Against or Abstain for each nominee
FOR
each nominee
Majority of votes cast with respect to each nomineeNo effectNo effect
Proposal 2: Ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for fiscal year 2024.
For, Against or AbstainFORMajority of shares represented virtually or by proxy and entitled to voteTreated as votes AgainstBrokers have discretion to vote
Proposal 3: Approval, on an advisory basis, of the compensation of our NEOs.For, Against or AbstainFORMajority of shares represented virtually or by proxy and entitled to voteTreated as votes AgainstNo effect
*See "Voting Information" for additional information on broker non-votes.
Proxy Solicitation Costs
The Company pays the cost of soliciting proxies. We may request banks and brokers to solicit their customers who beneficially own our Common Stock and will reimburse them for their reasonable out-of-pocket expenses relating to these efforts. We have also retained MacKenzie Partners, Inc. (“MacKenzie”) to assist in the distribution and solicitation of proxies, among other things, at a fee of $17,000, plus reimbursement for all reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. MacKenzie and our officers, directors and teammates may supplement the solicitation by mailing of proxies and by telephone, e-mail and personal solicitation. We have agreed to indemnify MacKenzie against liabilities and expenses arising in connection with the proxy solicitation unless caused by MacKenzie’s gross negligence, willful misconduct or bad faith.
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Proxy Statement

Delivery of Proxy Statement and Annual Report
Beneficial owners, but not record holders, of Common Stock who share a single address may receive only one copy of the e-proxy notice and, as applicable, the Annual Report to Stockholders and Proxy Statement (collectively, the "Proxy Materials"), unless their broker has received contrary instructions from any beneficial owner at that address. This practice, known as “householding,” is designed to reduce printing and mailing costs for DaVita. If any beneficial owner wishes to discontinue householding and receive a separate copy of the Proxy Materials, they should notify their broker. Beneficial owners can also request a separate copy of the Proxy Materials by contacting Investor Relations at the following address or phone number: DaVita Inc., Attn: Investor Relations, 2000 16th Street, Denver, Colorado 80202, 1-888-484-7505. Additionally, stockholders who share the same address and receive multiple copies of the Proxy Materials can request a single copy by contacting us at the address or phone number above.

Forward-Looking Statements
This Proxy Statement contains or refers to certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Without limiting the foregoing, statements including the words "expect," "intend," "will," "may," "continue," "target," "goal", “pledge” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. The Company bases its forward-looking statements on information available to it on the date of this Proxy Statement and undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of changed circumstances, new information, future events or otherwise, except as may otherwise be required by law. Actual future events could also differ materially due to numerous factors that involve substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties including, among other things, the risks and uncertainties set forth under "Risk Factors" and elsewhere in the Company's reports on Form 10-K and Form 10-Q and the other risks and uncertainties discussed in any subsequent reports that the Company files with the SEC from time to time.
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Other Matters
The Board does not know of any other matters to be presented at the Annual Meeting but, if other matters do properly come before the meeting, it is intended that the persons named as proxies in the proxy card will vote on them in accordance with their best judgment.
A copy of our 2023 Annual Report to Stockholders accompanies this Proxy Statement. The 2023 Annual Report to Stockholders includes our audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2023. Our Annual Report on Form 10-K includes these financial statements, as well as other supplementary financial information and certain schedules. The Annual Report on Form 10-K is not part of our proxy soliciting material. Copies of the Annual Report on Form 10-K, without exhibits, can be obtained without charge by contacting Investor Relations at the following address: Attn: Investor Relations, DaVita Inc., 2000 16th Street, Denver, Colorado 80202, 1-888-484-7505 or through our website, located at www.davita.com.
By order of the Board of Directors,
image33a.jpg
Samantha A. Caldwell
Corporate Secretary
April 26, 2024















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Annex A
RECONCILIATION OF NON-GAAP MEASURES
Note on Non-GAAP Financial Measures
As used in this Proxy Statement, the term “adjusted” refers to non-GAAP measures as follows, each as reconciled to its most comparable GAAP measure as presented in this Annex A. For income measures, the term “adjusted” refers to operating performance measures that exclude certain items such as impairment charges, earn-out revaluations, gains and losses on ownership changes, capacity closure charges, restructuring charges, IKC adjustments, accruals for legal matters and debt extinguishment and refinancing charges.
These non-GAAP or “adjusted” measures are presented because management believes these measures are useful adjuncts to GAAP results. However, these non-GAAP measures should not be considered alternatives to the corresponding measures determined under GAAP.
Specifically, management uses adjusted operating income and adjusted diluted earnings per share attributable to DaVita Inc. ("Adjusted Earnings per Share") to compare and evaluate our performance period over period and relative to competitors, to analyze the underlying trends in our business, to establish operational budgets and forecasts and for incentive compensation purposes. We believe these non-GAAP measures also are useful to investors and analysts in evaluating our performance over time and relative to competitors, as well as in analyzing the underlying trends in our business. Furthermore, we believe these presentations enhance a user's understanding of our normal consolidated operating results by excluding certain items which we do not believe are indicative of our ordinary results of operations. As a result, adjusting for these amounts allows for comparison to our normalized prior period results.
Finally, free cash flow from continuing operations represents net cash provided by operating activities less distributions to noncontrolling interests and all capital expenditures (including development capital expenditures, routine maintenance and information technology); plus contributions from noncontrolling interests and proceeds from the sale of self-developed properties. Management uses this measure to assess our ability to fund acquisitions, repurchase shares and meet our debt service obligations and we believe this measure is equally useful to investors and analysts as an adjunct to cash flows from operating activities from continuing operations and other measures under GAAP.
It is important to bear in mind that these non-GAAP "adjusted" measures are not measures of financial performance or liquidity under GAAP and should not be considered in isolation from, nor as substitutes for, their most comparable GAAP measures.
Consolidated adjusted operating income:
Year endedYear ended
December 31, 2023December 31, 2022
(dollars in millions)(dollars in millions)
Operating income$1,603 $1,339 
Closure charges99 88 
Severance and other costs28 23 
Legal accrual40 — 
IKC adjustment(55)— 
Earn-out revaluation(8)— 
Goodwill impairment26 — 
Adjusted operating income$1,734 $1,450 

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Adjusted Earnings per Share:
Year ended
December 31, 2023
Year ended
December 31, 2022
(Per share)(Per share)
Diluted net income per share attributable to DaVita Inc.$7.42 $5.85 
Closure charges1.06 0.92 
Severance and other costs0.31 0.24 
Legal accrual0.43 — 
IKC adjustment(0.59)— 
Earn-out revaluation(0.08)— 
Goodwill impairment0.28 — 
Other income - Mozarc gain(0.16)— 
Debt extinguishment and modification costs0.09 — 
Ballot initiative costs(0.08)0.53 
COVID-19 normalization adjustment(0.27)— 
Related income tax(0.22)(0.27)
Net income from discontinued operations, net of tax— (0.14)
Adjusted Earnings per Share$8.19 $7.13 
Year ended
December 31, 2021
Year ended
December 31, 2020
(Per share)(Per share)
Diluted net income per share attributable to DaVita Inc.$8.90 $6.31 
Loss on changes in ownership interest, net— 0.13 
Accruals for legal matters— 0.29 
Debt refinancing charges— 0.73 
Closure charges0.16 0.02 
Ballot initiative costs— 0.54 
Related income tax(0.04)(0.28)
Net loss from discontinued operations, net of tax— 0.08 
Income tax impact related to prior legal settlement0.23 — 
Adjusted Earnings per Share$9.24 $7.82 

Free cash flow:
Year endedYear ended
December 31, 2023December 31, 2022
(dollars in millions)(dollars in millions)
Net cash provided by operating activities$2,059 $1,565 
Distributions to noncontrolling interests(281)(268)
Contributions from noncontrolling interests15 15 
Expenditures for routine maintenance and information technology(406)(431)
Expenditures for development and relocations(162)(172)
Proceeds from sale of self-developed properties11 109 
Free cash flow$1,236 $817 
Numbers may not sum or recalculate due to the presentation of rounded numbers.
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