| Literature DB >> 33233979 |
Abstract
While most studies of health care industry consolidation focus on impacts on prices or quality, these are not its only potential impacts. This exploratory qualitative study describes industry and community stakeholder perceptions of the impacts of cumulative hospital, practice, and insurance mergers, acquisitions, and affiliations in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Since the 1980s, Pittsburgh's health care landscape has been transformed and is now dominated by competition between 2 integrated payer-provider networks, health care system UPMC (and its insurance arm UPMC Health Plan) and insurer Highmark (and its health care system Allegheny Health Network). Semi-structured interviews with 20 boundary-spanning stakeholders revealed a mix of perceived impacts of consolidation: some positive, some neutral or ambiguous, and some negative. Stakeholders perceived consolidation's positive impacts on long-term viability of health care facilities and their ability to adopt new care models, enhanced competition in health insurance, creation of foundations, and pioneering medical research and innovation. Stakeholders also believed that consolidation changed geographic access to care, physician referral behaviors, how educated patients were about their health care, the health care advertising environment, and economies of surrounding neighborhoods. Interviewees noted that consolidation raised questions about what the responsibilities of non-profit organizations are to their communities. However, stakeholders also reported their perceptions of negative outcomes, including ways in which consolidation had potentially reduced patient access to care, accountability and transparency, systems' willingness to collaborate, and physician autonomy. As trends toward consolidation are not slowing, there will be many opportunities to experiment with policy levers to mitigate its potentially negative consequences.Entities:
Keywords: Pennsylvania; Pittsburgh; economic competition; health care economics and organizations; health care sector; health facility merger; health services accessibility; hospital restructuring; insurance; interview; qualitative research
Year: 2020 PMID: 33233979 PMCID: PMC7691888 DOI: 10.1177/0046958020976246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inquiry ISSN: 0046-9580 Impact factor: 1.730
Pittsburgh Health Care Consolidation Stakeholders Contacted and Interviewed by Category.
| Stakeholder Category | Contacted (Interviewed) |
|---|---|
| Patient, labor, community advocates | 11 (6) |
| Health care sector leaders | 9 (6) |
| Professional, business, or civic association leaders | 4 (4) |
| Government officials | 6 (3) |
| Media members | 2 (1) |
| TOTAL | 32 (20) |
Summary of Themes of the Potential Impacts of Health Care Consolidation in Pittsburgh According to Interviewed Stakeholders.
| Level | Theme | Thematic Statements |
|---|---|---|
| Overall health care environment | Profits and costs | • Interviewees expressed concerns that consolidation had
replaced mission-driven patient care with an environment
where “the margin becomes your
mission.” |
| Long-term viability | • Interviewees identified consolidation as mostly beneficial for the long-term viability of Pittsburgh’s health care institutions. | |
| Changing care models and geographic access | • Interviewees identified implementation of new care models,
especially more outpatient-based care, as a benefit of
consolidation. | |
| Increased competition | • The rise of consolidated health systems in Pittsburgh and
the “divorce” between Highmark and UPMC forced systems to
invest in their offerings to compete. | |
| Individual health care systems | Accountability and governance | • Interviewees perceived that consolidation had made the
large systems less transparent and accountable to
outsiders. |
| Advertising and confusion | • Interviewees noted the “deluge” of billboard, print, radio, and television advertising for the consolidated health systems in Pittsburgh had created confusion where Pittsburghers could access high-quality care. | |
| Provider power, decreased collaboration | • Interviewees discussed how Pittsburgh’s consolidation had
tipped the balance of power away from insurers and toward
health care providers. | |
| Loss of mission, public perceptions | • Stakeholders claimed that hospitals acquired by systems
are less mission-driven, especially in terms of providing
care regardless of ability to pay. | |
| Data, research, and quality | • Interviewees noted that a positive outcome of consolidated
health systems is the accumulation of data to conduct
research. | |
| Internal health care stakeholders | Referrals and patient experience | • Interviewees remarked on how consolidation changed
physician referral incentives. |
| Access to medical care and interpretation | • Interviewees noted that employed physicians have less
latitude to discount care, which has made it more difficult
to access care for uninsured patients. | |
| Clinician employment and autonomy | • Direct employment of physicians by the consolidated health systems has reduced the autonomy of physicians. | |
| Wages and unionization | • Interviewees noted how consolidated entities have “dictated wages” for physicians and became targets of service worker unionization efforts. | |
| External community stakeholders | Foundation formation and non-profit support | • Several interviewees noted that acquisition of non-profit hospitals created new entities that support community health. |
| Innovation and private sector growth | • Interviewees remarked on the contribution of the consolidated health systems to the city’s economic revitalization and “pioneering” work in medical care. | |
| Local economic effects | • Interviewees described how consolidation had negatively impacted local neighborhood economies and small businesses. | |
| Non-profit status and community benefits | • Interviewees questioned whether consolidated health care
entities deserved non-profit status if they excluded
patients from their facilities. |
Figure 1.Locations and ownership status of Pittsburgh non-government acute care hospitals: 1989, 1999, 2009, and 2019.
Notes. Hospitals not affiliated with UPMC or Allegheny Health Network (AHN) or its predecessors, the Allegheny Health Education and Research Foundation (AHERF) or West Penn Allegheny Health System (WPAHS) are light circles. Hospitals acquired by UPMC are dark triangles. Hospitals acquired by AHERF are dark pluses, WPAHS are dark crosses, and AHN are dark squares. If hospitals have changed locations over time, they are represented by their current location. Government, psychiatric, and long-term acute care hospitals (and conversions of acute care hospitals to subacute care hospitals) are excluded.