Hospital consolidation and negotiated PPO prices.

Cory Capps, David Dranove
Author Information
  1. Cory Capps: Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA. c-capps@kellogg.northwestern.edu

Abstract

We examine the effects of hospital consolidation on the actual prices paid by preferred provider organizations. We find that price increases following consolidations among nearby hospitals invariably equaled or exceeded median price increases among other hospitals in the same market. Using multivariate regression analysis, we find that consolidation enables hospitals to increase prices in three of the four markets studied; these increases are generally statistically significant. In the remaining market, the measured effect was zero. Our results suggest that some, but not all, consolidations of competing hospitals facilitate price increases. We conclude that antitrust scrutiny of hospital consolidation is warranted.

MeSH Term

Economic Competition
Economics, Hospital
Negotiating
Preferred Provider Organizations
United States

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0consolidationincreaseshospitalspricespricehospitalfindconsolidationsamongmarketexamineeffectsactualpaidpreferredproviderorganizationsfollowingnearbyinvariablyequaledexceededmedianUsingmultivariateregressionanalysisenablesincreasethreefourmarketsstudiedgenerallystatisticallysignificantremainingmeasuredeffectzeroresultssuggestcompetingfacilitateconcludeantitrustscrutinywarrantedHospitalnegotiatedPPO

Similar Articles

Cited By (9)