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Monthly Archives: August 2013

National Law Review Requests That Its Article On The FTC Use of Non-Structural Remedies Be Removed from This Site

Posted on August 30, 2013

The National Law Review has requested, and CRE has consented, to the removal of an article we posted from their website  which described the FTC’s use of non-structural remedies in the resolution of issues related to hospital mergers.

 The National Law Review states the reason behind their request was that CRE failed to receive their permission to do so—a responsible request which we fulfilled.

 National readership of this website continues to increase at an exponential  rate and we are pleased that publications of such a high quality as the National Law Review read our posts. We were also pleased to broadcast our interpretation of the legal analysis presented by the authors which  might have been of interest to both the FTC and their clients.

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The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Hospitals and the Insurance Industry

Posted on August 23, 2013

Editor’s Note:  The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is playing an ever increasingly greater role in  the war between hospitals and the insurance industry as noted in the following article.  We also note that a number of economists specializing in healthcare often cite studies funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation as their confirmatory source.

The following article demonstrates the need for an intervention by a regulatory watchdog to review the record and present its findings in an easily understandable form.  Accordingly given the interest in this topic, and recognizing CRE’s limited resources, it will conduct a review of one of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation studies and post the resultant analysis on this Interactive Public Docket (IPD) on Sept 16. 

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Larger Populations To Be Served Demand Larger Hospitals

Posted on August 22, 2013

Hospital consolidation: Why it’s all about the finances

 

Valerie Bauman
 Puget Sound Business Journal
 

As hospitals across Washington have consolidated, leadership usually points to the improved services and better patient care that will result.

But at the core of these deals are financial drivers: Affiliations allow hospitals to save money or make money. If it didn’t pencil out, they wouldn’t do it.

“There are a lot of reasons why hospitals would affiliate, but certainly one of them is that you have more access to resources if you have a bigger partner,” said Mary Kay Clunies-Ross, spokeswoman for the Washington State Hospital Association.

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New Laws and Rising Costs Create a Surge of Supersizing Hospitals

Posted on August 13, 2013

 
Editor’s Note:  Please note the following statement in the article: “The consolidations are being driven by a confluence of powerful forces, not least of which is President Obama’s signature health care law, the Affordable Care Act.”
 
 
The New York Times
By JULIE CRESWELL and REED ABELSON

Hospitals across the nation are being swept up in the biggest wave of mergers since the 1990s, a development that is creating giant hospital systems that could one day dominate American health care and drive up costs.

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Time Magazine on Hospital Consolidation

Posted on August 11, 2013

Editors Note : Please note the statement by the American Hospital Association: “Insurers are banding together, and the federal government underpays for services through Medicare and Medicaid”

Kate Pickert

Fewer Hospitals May Lead to Higher Prices

Obamacare is coming and with it a new wave of hospital consolidation


Hospital

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Will Medicare Fixes Lead to Hospital Mergers?

Posted on August 8, 2013

Peter R. Orszag,

Council on Foreign Relations

Improving the U.S. health-care system requires encouraging low-value doctors and hospitals to practice as well as high-value ones do. The gap between the two is wide, but that only shows how much room we have for improvement.

Costs vary wildly across regions, among hospitals within a region, and even among doctors within a given hospital. Because this variation doesn’t appear to be reliably correlated with differences in quality, value seems to be much higher in some settings than in others. What is causing this, and what might we do about it?

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Even When Hospitals Close Questions Are Raised Regarding Cost Increases Associated With Hospital Consolidation

Posted on August 7, 2013

Editor’s  Note:  We reserve the right to place our heading in the lead to any post submitted by a member of the public. In any event we always print the suggested post albeit in a different location.  In this event the above  title  suggests a potential need  for hospital consolidtion.

 

NYC Losing Small Hospitals as Money Woes Mount

Since 2000, 19 hospitals across the city have closed due to financial pressures, and nos. 20 and 21 are underway

By David B. Caruso

NBC  News New York

NYC Losing Small Hospitals as Money Woes Mount

AP

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Thank You! CRE Appreciates the Many Posts We Have Received From Our Readers

Posted on August 6, 2013

CRE  is encouraged by the  excellent posts made by our readers.  All readers will note that one can post an article simply by providing  the information in the boxes to the right of this post. No registration is required and the posts can be made anonymously.

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The Role of State Regulators

Posted on August 6, 2013

State regulators may also play a role in deciding hospital merger policy. A story from Northwest Public Radio, “Controversy Over State Role In Hospital Mergers” in Washington State is available here, http://www.nwpr.org/post/controversy-over-state-role-hospital-mergers

The issue of what role state regulators should play, if any, in hospital mergers is not new. Attached is a 1994 report from the Massachusetts Senate, “AN EMERGING CONCERN: The State’s Role in Hospital Consolidations.”

emerging_concern.pdf (2 MB)

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The Need for Informed Amicus Briefs in Hospital Mergers

Posted on August 6, 2013

Editor’s Note:  The talented analysts at the FTC and the DOJ  frequently review merger applications within a set of rules that are  open to interpretation.  In some instances Amicus Briefs filed by regulatory watchdogs such as CRE can ensure a complete venting of relevant issues. CRE has filed a number of amicus briefs in regulatory proceedings; in particular in those proceedings which could  be dominated by compliance with the Data Quality Act.

 

Merged hospitals’ pricing a concern

By KENT JACKSON (Staff Writer)

Standard Speaker

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