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1.
JAMA Netw Open ; 4(9): e2124662, 2021 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34542619

ABSTRACT

Importance: Rural hospitals are increasingly merging with other hospitals. The associations of hospital mergers with quality of care need further investigation. Objectives: To examine changes in quality of care for patients at rural hospitals that merged compared with those that remained independent. Design, Setting, and Participants: In this case-control study, mergers at community nonrehabilitation hospitals in Federal Office of Rural Health Policy-eligible zip codes during 2009 to 2016 in 32 states were identified from Irving Levin Associates and the American Hospital Association Annual Survey. Outcomes for inpatient stays for select conditions and elective procedures were derived from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases. Difference-in-differences linear probability models were used to assess premerger to postmerger changes in outcomes for patients discharged from merged vs comparison hospitals that remained independent. Data were analyzed from February to December 2020. Exposures: Hospital mergers. Main Outcomes and Measures: The main outcome was in-hospital mortality among patients admitted for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), heart failure, stroke, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, hip fracture, or pneumonia, as well as complications during stays for elective surgeries. Results: A total of 172 merged hospitals and 266 comparison hospitals were analyzed. After matching, baseline patient characteristics were similar for 303 747 medical stays and 175 970 surgical stays at merged hospitals and 461 092 medical stays and 278 070 surgical stays at comparison hospitals. In-hospital mortality among AMI stays decreased from premerger to postmerger at merged hospitals (9.4% to 5.0%) and comparison hospitals (7.9% to 6.3%). Adjusting for patient, hospital, and community characteristics, the decrease in in-hospital mortality among AMI stays 1 year postmerger was 1.755 (95% CI, -2.825 to -0.685) percentage points greater at merged hospitals than at comparison hospitals (P < .001). This finding held up to 4 years postmerger (DID, -2.039 [95% CI, -3.388 to -0.691] percentage points; P = .003). Greater premerger to postmerger decreases in mortality at merged vs comparison hospitals were also observed at 5 years postmerger among stays for heart failure (DID, -0.756 [95% CI, -1.448 to -0.064] percentage points; P = .03), stroke (DID, -1.667 [95% CI, -3.050 to -0.283] percentage points; P = .02), and pneumonia (DID, -0.862 [95% CI, -1.681 to -0.042] percentage points; P = .04). Conclusions and Relevance: These findings suggest that rural hospital mergers were associated with better mortality outcomes for AMI and several other conditions. This finding is important to enhancing rural health care and reducing urban-rural disparities in quality of care.


Subject(s)
Diagnosis-Related Groups/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Rural/statistics & numerical data , Inpatients/statistics & numerical data , Quality of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Aged , Case-Control Studies , Databases, Factual , Diagnosis-Related Groups/standards , Female , Health Care Costs/statistics & numerical data , Health Care Surveys , Health Facility Merger/standards , Hospital Mortality , Hospitals, Rural/standards , Humans , Linear Models , Male , Middle Aged , Myocardial Infarction/mortality , Patient Discharge/statistics & numerical data , United States
2.
J Healthc Manag ; 65(5): 346-364, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32925534

ABSTRACT

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The number of rural hospital mergers has increased substantially in recent years. A commonly reported reason for merging is to increase access to capital. However, no empirical evidence exists to show whether capital expenditures increased at rural hospitals after a merger. We used a difference-in-differences approach to determine whether total capital expenditures changed at rural hospitals after a merger. The comparison group (rural hospitals that did not merge during the 2012 through 2015 study period) was weighted using inverse probability of treatment weights. The key outcome measure was logged total capital expenditures.Merging resulted in a 26% increase in capital expenditures and also was associated with a significant improvement in plant age. The postmerger improvement in plant age may have been partially attributable to merger-related accounting changes and partially attributable to increased capital expenses, possibly on long-term asset renovations and replacement.These findings suggest that through mergers, rural hospital board members and executives who have accepted or are considering a merger may improve a hospital's ability to increase capital expenditures. Further, increased capital investments in rural hospitals may be an important signal to the community that the acquirer intends to keep the rural hospital open and continue providing some volume and level of services within the community. Future research should determine how capital is spent after a merger.


Subject(s)
Capital Expenditures/statistics & numerical data , Capital Expenditures/trends , Health Facility Merger/economics , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Rural/economics , Hospitals, Rural/statistics & numerical data , Forecasting , Humans , United States
3.
BMJ Open Qual ; 9(1)2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32193196

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The rapid merger in a crisis of three GP practices to incorporate the patients from a neighbouring closing surgery, led to the redesign of primary care provision. A deliberate focus on patient safety and staff engagement was maintained throughout this challenging transition to working at scale in an innovative, integrated and collaborative GP model. METHOD: 3 cycles of a staff culture tool (Safety, Communication, Organizational Reliability, Physician & Employee burn-out and Engagement) were performed at intervals of 9-12 months with structured feedback and engagement with staff after each round. The impact of different styles of feedback, the effect of specific interventions, and overall changes in safety climate and culture domains were observed in detail throughout this time period. RESULTS: Strong themes demonstrated were that: there was a general improvement in all culture domains; specific focus on teams that expressed they were struggling created the most effective outcomes; an initial lack of trust of the management structure improved; adapting and tailoring the styles of feedback was most efficacious; and burn-out scores dropped progressively. A unique observation of the rate at which different modalities of safety climate and culture change with time is demonstrated. CONCLUSION: With limited time, resources and energy, especially at times of crisis or change, the rapid and accurate identification of which domains of 'culture' and which teams required the most input at each stage of the journey is invaluable. Using this tool and prioritising patient safety, enables rapid and effective positive change to the culture and shape of expanding practices. It affirms that new models of working at scale in GP can be positively embraced with improvements in safety culture, if this is deliberately focused on and included in the transition process.


Subject(s)
Health Facility Merger/methods , Safety Management/methods , Attitude of Health Personnel , General Practice/methods , General Practice/standards , General Practice/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/standards , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Leadership , Organizational Culture , Safety Management/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires
4.
JAMA Netw Open ; 2(5): e193987, 2019 05 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31099872

ABSTRACT

Importance: Mergers and acquisitions among health care institutions are increasingly common, and dialysis markets have undergone several decades of mergers and acquisitions. Objective: To examine the outcomes of hemodialysis facility acquisitions independent of associated changes in market competition resulting from acquisitions. Design, Setting, and Participants: Cohort study using difference-in-differences (DID) analyses to compare changes in health outcomes over time among in-center US dialysis facilities that were acquired by a hemodialysis chain with facilities located nearby but not acquired. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression models and negative binomial models with predicted marginal effects were developed to examine health outcomes, controlling for patient, facility, and geographic characteristics. All facility ownership types were examined together and stratified analyses were conducted of facilities that were independently owned and chain owned prior to acquisitions. The study was conducted from January 2001 to September 2015; 174 905 patients starting in-center dialysis in the 3 years before and following dialysis facility acquisitions were included. Data were analyzed from March 2017 to December 2018. Exposures: Acquisition by a hemodialysis chain. Main Outcomes and Measures: Twelve-month hazard of death and hospital days per patient-year were the primary outcomes. Results: Of the 174 905 patients included in the study, 79 705 were women (45.6%), 24 409 (14.0%) were of Hispanic ethnicity, 61 815 (35.3%) were black, 105 272 (60.2%) were white, and 1247 (0.7%) were Native American. Mean (SD) age was 65 (15) years. Before acquisitions, adjusted mortality and hospitalization rates were 10% (95% CI, -16% to -5%) and 2.9 days per patient-year (95% CI, -3.8 to -2.0) lower, respectively, at independently owned facilities that were acquired compared with those that were not acquired, while hospitalization rates were 0.7 days (95% CI, -1.2 to -2.0) lower at chain-owned facilities that were acquired compared with those that were not acquired. In stratified analyses of independently owned facilities, mortality decreases were smaller at acquired (-8.4%; 95% CI, -14% to -25%) vs nonacquired (-20.3%; 95% CI, -25.8% to -14.3%) facilities (DID P < .001). Similarly, hospitalization rates did not change at acquired facilities and decreased by 2.6 days per patient-year (95% CI, -3.6 to -1.7 days) at nonacquired facilities (DID P < .001). Acquisitions were not associated with changes in health outcomes at chain-owned facilities. Slower reductions in mortality and hospitalization rates at independently owned facilities contributed to significant differences in hospitalizations (-2.0 days; 95% CI, -2.5 to -1.6, at nonacquired vs 0.9 days; 95% CI, -1.3 to -0.5, at acquired facilities; DID, P < .001) across all ownership types but not mortality (DID, P = .28) with regard to acquisitions. Conclusions and Relevance: Acquisition of independently owned dialysis facilities by larger dialysis organizations was associated with slower decreases in mortality and hospitalization rates, as nonacquired facilities appeared to experience more rapid improvements in outcomes over time.


Subject(s)
Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Renal Dialysis/mortality , Adult , Aged , Cohort Studies , Female , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Ownership/statistics & numerical data , Registries , Renal Dialysis/economics , Young Adult
5.
Clin J Oncol Nurs ; 22(5): 475, 2018 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30239513

ABSTRACT

More and more community cancer care centers are shifting the model of delivery. In two years, 423 individual clinic treatment sites have closed, 658 oncology practices have been acquired by hospital systems, and 359 practices have struggled financially. These statistics represent an 11.3% increase in the number of community cancer clinic closings and an 8% increase in the number of facility consolidations into hospital settings. Overall, since 2008, 13.8 practices per month have been affected by closings, hospital acquisitions, and corporate mergers.


Subject(s)
Community Health Services/organization & administration , Community Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Closure/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Accessibility/statistics & numerical data , Medical Oncology/statistics & numerical data , Neoplasms/therapy , Humans , United States
6.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 37(9): 1417-1424, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30179549

ABSTRACT

California became very successful in controlling rising health care costs by promoting price competition through market-based, managed care policies. However, recent data reveal that the state has not been able sustain its initial success in controlling growth in hospital prices. Two powerful trends emerged in California that eroded the conditions needed to sustain price competition. To ensure timely access to emergency hospital services, government regulators enacted regulations that had the unintended effect of giving hospitals tremendous leverage when contracting with health plans. Also, antitrust authorities allowed hospitals to consolidate into multihospital systems by adding members that were not direct competitors in local markets. The combined effect of these policies and consolidation trends was a substantial reduction in the competitiveness of provider markets in California, which reduced health plans' ability to leverage competitive provider markets and negotiate lower prices and other benefits for their members. Policy makers can and should act to restore competitive conditions.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel , Economic Competition/statistics & numerical data , Economic Competition/trends , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Health Policy , Multi-Institutional Systems/statistics & numerical data , California , Health Care Costs , Humans , United States
7.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 37(9): 1409-1416, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30179552

ABSTRACT

California has heavily concentrated hospital, physician, and health insurance markets, but their current structure and functioning is not well understood. We assessed consolidation trends and performed an analysis of "hot spots"-markets that potentially warrant concern and scrutiny by regulators in terms of both horizontal concentration (such as hospital-hospital mergers) and vertical integration (hospitals' acquisition of physician practices). In 2016, seven counties were high on all six measures used in our hot-spot analysis (four horizontal concentration and two vertical integration measures), and five counties were high on five. The percentage of physicians in practices owned by a hospital increased from about 25 percent in 2010 to more than 40 percent in 2016. The estimated impact of the increase in vertical integration from 2013 to 2016 in highly concentrated hospital markets was found to be associated with a 12 percent increase in Marketplace premiums. For physician outpatient services, the increase in vertical integration was also associated with a 9 percent increase in specialist prices and a 5 percent increase in primary care prices. Legislative proposals, actions by the state's attorney general, and other regulatory changes are suggested.


Subject(s)
Commerce/statistics & numerical data , Delivery of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Health Insurance Exchanges/statistics & numerical data , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/economics , Primary Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Adult , California , Delivery of Health Care/trends , Health Expenditures , Health Policy , Humans , Insurance, Health/economics , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/statistics & numerical data , Primary Health Care/economics , United States
8.
J Health Econ ; 59: 139-152, 2018 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29727744

ABSTRACT

During the past decade, U.S. hospitals have acquired a large number of physician practices. For example, from 2007 to 2013, hospitals acquired nearly 10% of the practices in our sample. We find that the prices for the services provided by acquired physicians increase by an average of 14.1% post-acquisition. Nearly half of this increase is attributable to the exploitation of payment rules. Price increases are larger when the acquiring hospital has a larger share of its inpatient market. We find that integration of primary care physicians increases enrollee spending by 4.9%.


Subject(s)
Economics, Hospital/organization & administration , Fees, Medical/statistics & numerical data , General Practice/organization & administration , Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/economics , Hospital Administration , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/organization & administration , Economics, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/organization & administration , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Administration/economics , Humans , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/economics , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/statistics & numerical data , United States
9.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 36(9): 1556-1563, 2017 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28874481

ABSTRACT

The growing concentration of physician markets throughout the United States has been raising antitrust concerns, yet the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission have challenged only a small number of mergers and acquisitions in this field. Using proprietary claims data from states collectively containing more than 12 percent of the US population, we found that 22 percent of physician markets were highly concentrated in 2013, according to federal merger guidelines. Most of the increases in physician practice size and market concentration resulted from numerous small transactions, rather than a few large transactions. Among highly concentrated markets that had increases large enough to raise antitrust concerns, only 28 percent experienced any individual acquisition that would have been presumed to be anticompetitive under federal merger guidelines. Furthermore, most acquisitions were below the dollar thresholds that would have required the parties to report the transaction to antitrust authorities. Under present mechanisms, federal authorities have only limited ability to counteract consolidation in most US physician markets.


Subject(s)
Antitrust Laws , Economic Competition/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Government Agencies/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Facility Merger/organization & administration , Insurance Claim Review/statistics & numerical data , Practice Valuation and Purchase , United States
10.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 35(5): 907-14, 2016 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27140998

ABSTRACT

Two defining features of the nursing home industry are the tremendous churn in chain ownership and the perception of low-quality care at many facilities. We examined whether nursing homes that underwent chain-related transactions, such as mergers and acquisitions, experienced a larger number of health deficiency citations than nursing homes that maintained common ownership over the same period. Using facility-level data for the period 1993-2010, we found that those nursing homes that underwent chain-related transactions had more deficiency citations in the years preceding and following a transaction than those nursing homes that maintained common ownership. Thus, we did not find that these transactions led to a decline in quality. Instead, we found that chains targeted nursing homes that were already having quality problems and that these problems persisted after the transaction. Given the high frequency of nursing home chain transactions, policy makers will need to continue to invest in tracking, reporting, and overseeing these transactions. One important step would be to report more detailed data on chain ownership, transactions, and aggregate chain quality on the Nursing Home Compare website, the federal government's online report card for nursing homes.


Subject(s)
Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Nursing Homes/trends , Ownership/economics , Quality of Health Care/standards , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Nursing Homes/organization & administration , Ownership/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires
11.
Health Care Manag Sci ; 19(1): 43-57, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24888268

ABSTRACT

Hospital efficiency analysis depends largely on the model specifications. This study discusses the importance of the case-mix index (CMI) to homogenize the sample of inpatient discharges. It proposes a new index where they are classified by service, since it is usual to have lack of data to compute the CMI and this can influence the credibility of results. Data from the Portuguese national diagnosis-related group (DRG) database was utilized. Three different approaches are developed in this paper, based on locally convex order-m method as well as on translog functions. The first one correlates the efficiency with different inpatients weighting schemes, by using the Nadaraya-Watson method. The second approach compares different frontiers that have been computed using the different weighting schemes. Finally, by using bootstrap, the paper investigates whether the inclusion of severity/ complexity-related variables in the model statistically modifies the results. It has been shown that, under the Portuguese healthcare framework, if the model is environment corrected (which should include epidemiological and main political/ structural health reforms variables), then the severity adjustment of inpatients is pointless. The employment of an inpatient-weighting scheme, such as the CMI, may introduce significant frontier shift, thus its absence is not recommended in productivity evolution analyzes. The CMI shifts the efficiency frontier, but not the relative position of units against it (the last scenario if exogenous variables are present).


Subject(s)
Diagnosis-Related Groups/statistics & numerical data , Efficiency, Organizational/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Administration/statistics & numerical data , Models, Theoretical , Costs and Cost Analysis , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Diagnosis-Related Groups/economics , Efficiency, Organizational/economics , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Length of Stay , Portugal , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Severity of Illness Index
12.
Health Econ ; 25(4): 439-54, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25694000

ABSTRACT

Multiple parties influence the choice of facility for hospital-based inpatient and outpatient services. The patient is the central figure, but their choice of facility is guided by their physician and influenced by hospital characteristics. This study estimated changes in referral patterns for inpatient admissions and outpatient diagnostic imaging associated with changes in ownership of three multispecialty clinic systems headquartered in Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN. These clinic systems were acquired by two hospital-owned integrated delivery systems (IDSs) in 2007, increasing the probability that hospital preferences influenced physician guidance on facility choice. We used a longitudinal dataset that allowed us to predict changes in referral patterns, controlling for health plan enrollee, coverage, and clinic system characteristics. The results are an important empirical contribution to the literature examining the impact of hospital ownership on location of service. When this change in ownership forged new relationships, there was a significant reduction in the use of facilities historically selected for inpatient admissions and outpatient imaging and an increase in the use of the acquiring IDS's facilities. These changes were weaker in the IDS acquiring two clinic systems, suggesting that management of multiple acquisitions simultaneously may impact the ability of the IDS to build strong referral relationships.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care, Integrated/organization & administration , Health Facility Merger/organization & administration , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Referral and Consultation/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Female , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Minnesota , Models, Organizational
14.
BMC Health Serv Res ; 14: 50, 2014 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24490750

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hospitals are merging to become more cost-effective. Mergers are often complex and difficult processes with variable outcomes. The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of mergers on long-term sickness absence among hospital employees. METHODS: Long-term sickness absence was analyzed among hospital employees (N = 107 209) in 57 hospitals involved in 23 mergers in Norway between 2000 and 2009. Variation in long-term sickness absence was explained through a fixed effects multivariate regression analysis using panel data with years-since-merger as the independent variable. RESULTS: We found a significant but modest effect of mergers on long-term sickness absence in the year of the merger, and in years 2, 3 and 4; analyzed by gender there was a significant effect for women, also for these years, but only in year 4 for men. However, men are less represented among the hospital workforce; this could explain the lack of significance. CONCLUSIONS: Mergers has a significant effect on employee health that should be taken into consideration when deciding to merge hospitals. This study illustrates the importance of analyzing the effects of mergers over several years and the need for more detailed analyses of merger processes and of the changes that may occur as a result of such mergers.


Subject(s)
Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Personnel, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Sick Leave/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Norway/epidemiology , Peptides, Cyclic , Personnel, Hospital/psychology , Sex Factors , Young Adult
15.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 33(1): 172-7, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24395949

ABSTRACT

Health care merger and acquisition activity has increased since enactment of the Affordable Care Act in 2010. Proceeds from transactions involving nonprofit hospitals, health systems, and health plans will endow philanthropic foundations, collectively known as health legacy foundations. Building on work by Grantmakers In Health, we undertook a systematic search for these foundations and generated a newly updated, comprehensive database. We found 306 organizations in forty-three states that have been endowed with proceeds from the sale, merger, lease, joint venture, or other restructuring of nonprofit health care assets. These health legacy foundations had $26.2 billion in assets in 2010. Concentrated in the southern United States, foundations originating from hospitals and specialty care facilities (86.6 percent) held mean assets of $64.7 million per funder and typically restricted grants to local communities. Foundations formed from health plans (13.4 percent) held higher mean assets ($222 million), usually served larger areas, and were more likely to engage in health care advocacy. Recent transactions involving smaller and stand-alone nonprofit hospitals will infuse many more communities with unprecedented charitable wealth.


Subject(s)
Financial Management/economics , Financial Management/statistics & numerical data , Foundations/economics , Fund Raising/economics , Health Facility Merger/economics , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/economics , Databases, Factual , Foundations/statistics & numerical data , Fund Raising/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/statistics & numerical data , United States
20.
Health Serv Manage Res ; 26(1): 1-8, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25594996

ABSTRACT

Health policy in most West European countries is directed at transforming the healthcare systems into more self-regulating and competitive systems. After a period of strong regulation, the Dutch government decided to step back and created conditions in which competition could lead to cost management and quality improvement. The question is whether mergers have contributed to the survival chances of hospitals. This paper describes the results of an analysis performed on the survival of all Dutch hospitals in the years 1978 to 2010. The survival of hospitals during this period was determined and their survival rates were calculated statistically. Furthermore, the relation between a hospital's lifespan and a number of predictive variables was investigated. In this study, more detailed consideration is given to the fact of whether a hospital merged with another hospital. Bivariate analysis shows that smaller hospitals in particular have been driven out of the market. The difference in lifespan between hospitals which had merged and those which had not, appeared to be significant. However, a multivariate analysis, when corrected for size, type, and location, showed that merging had no significant effect on hospital lifespan.


Subject(s)
Health Facility Closure/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Economic Competition , Economics, Hospital/legislation & jurisprudence , Economics, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Bed Capacity/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, General/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Special/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Netherlands
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