大医疗的传播

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Milbank Quarterly Pub Date : 2023-06-01 Epub Date: 2023-03-29 DOI:10.1111/1468-0009.12613
Lawton Robert Burns, Mark V Pauly
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引用次数: 0

摘要

政策要点 医院管理者为系统合并提出了许多缺乏学术依据的理由。数十年的学术研究质疑系统合并是否会带来公共利益。反垄断机构需要继续密切关注这些交易。最近,跨越不同地域市场的医院系统合并呈上升趋势。经济学家提醒政策制定者注意这种跨市场兼并可能对医院价格产生的潜在影响。我们认为,还有其他一些学者们并不常见的原因值得关注。进行跨市场兼并可能纯粹是为了增加高管薪酬,实现组织增长。卖方的合并应该对消费者有明显的好处。系统高管及其董事会应承担举证责任。联邦监管机构和各州总检察长应认识到,兼并各方提出的跨市场系统的理由不可能在兼并决策中起作用或占主导地位。政策制定者应谨慎通过鼓励医院合并的立法:在不同地域市场运营的医院系统之间的合并呈增长趋势,这种合并被称为跨市场合并。经济学家从反竞争行为和对保险公司的定价权方面对这些更广泛的系统进行了分析。本文评估了这些新医院系统带来的益处,这些益处涉及一系列通常未被研究的问题:提高效率、新能力、运营协同效应以及解决医疗不公平问题。因此,本文对这些新兴的跨市场系统进行了 "深入探讨",以评估它们可能带来的价值以及为谁带来价值:方法:本文研究了最近宣布的跨市场兼并,从这些系统的高管和行业顾问所表达的假定效益角度进行了分析。然后根据医院系统成果的现有证据对这些假定效益进行评估:跨市场医院兼并的倡导者列举了大量好处。研究表明,这些好处并不存在。更多的证据表明,在跨市场合并的过程中,可能还有其他动机在起作用,而这些动机与效率、协同效应或社区利益无关。相反,这些兼并可能是系统首席执行官(CEO)为提高薪酬而做出的自私行为:结论:跨市场医院兼并可能不会给参与兼并的医院或其所在社区带来任何好处。参与这些跨市场兼并的医院系统的董事会需要对其首席执行官的行为进行更严格的监督。
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Big Med's Spread.

Policy Points Hospital executives posit a number of rationales for system mergers which lack any basis in academic evidence. Decades of academic research question whether system combinations confer public benefits. Antitrust authorities need to continue to closely scrutinize these transactions. Recently, mergers of hospital systems that span different geographic markets are on the rise. Economists have alerted policymakers about the potential impacts such cross-market mergers may have on hospital prices. We suggest there are other reasons for concern that scholars have not often confonted. Cross-market mergers may be conducted for purely self-serving reasons of organizational growth that increases executive compensation. Combinations of sellers should have clear advantages to consumers. System executives and their boards should bear the burden of proof. Federal regulators and state attorney generals should be cognizant that rationales for cross-market systems advanced by merging parties are unlikely to be operative or dominant in merger decision making. Policymakers should be careful about passing legislation that encourages hospitals to consolidate.

Context: There is a growing trend of combinations among hospital systems that operate in different geographic markets known as cross-market mergers. Economists have analyzed these broader systems in terms of their anticompetitive behavior and pricing power over insurers. This paper evaluates the benefits advanced by these new hospital systems that speak to a different set of issues not usually studied: increased efficiencies, new capabilities, operating synergies, and addressing health inequities. The paper thus "looks under the hood" of these emerging, cross-market systems to assess what value they might bestow and upon whom.

Methods: The paper examines recently announced cross-market mergers in terms of their supposed benefits, as expressed by the systems' executives as well as by industry consultants. These presumed benefits are then evaluated against existing evidence regarding hospital system outcomes.

Findings: Advocates of cross-market hospital mergers cite a host of benefits. Research suggests these benefits are nonexistent. Additional evidence suggests other motives may be at play in the formation of cross-market mergers that have nothing to do with efficiencies, synergies, or community benefits. Instead these mergers may be self-serving efforts by system chief executive officers (CEOs) to boost their compensation.

Conclusions: Cross-market hospital mergers may yield no benefits to the hospitals involved or the communities in which they operate. The boards of hospital systems that engage in these cross-market mergers need to exercise greater diligence over the actions of their CEOs.

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来源期刊
Milbank Quarterly
Milbank Quarterly 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
9.60
自引率
3.00%
发文量
37
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Milbank Quarterly is devoted to scholarly analysis of significant issues in health and health care policy. It presents original research, policy analysis, and commentary from academics, clinicians, and policymakers. The in-depth, multidisciplinary approach of the journal permits contributors to explore fully the social origins of health in our society and to examine in detail the implications of different health policies. Topics addressed in The Milbank Quarterly include the impact of social factors on health, prevention, allocation of health care resources, legal and ethical issues in health policy, health and health care administration, and the organization and financing of health care.
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