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Monday, April 20, 2015

The ObamaCare Effect: Hospital Monopolies

The ObamaCare Effect: Hospital Monopolies

Last year saw 95 hospital mergers and acquisitions, a frenzy encouraged by the Affordable Care Act.

ENLARGE
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES/PHOTO RESEARCHERS RM

During the 2008 financial crisis, “too big to fail” became a familiar phrase in the U.S. financial system. Now the U.S. health-care system is heading down the same path with a record number of hospital mergers and acquisitions—95 last year—some creating regional monopolies that, as in all monopolies, will likely result in higher prices from decreased competition.

Hospital consolidation, done properly in a competitive marketplace, can have positive effects. Multi-hospital conglomerates can quickly disseminate best practices and quality initiatives, for example. But competition and the choices it provides can also disappear. 

Health-care conglomeration aligns with the Affordable Care Act, which created incentives for physicians and hospitals to work together in “accountable care organizations.” But an important and often forgotten prerequisite for this model is hospital competition.

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