About Megan Bochum
So far Megan Bochum has created 5 blog entries.
The Source Roundup: January 2026 Edition
Megan Bochum January 1, 2026
Antitrust Enforcement Fixing a Broken System: Policy Responses to Hospital Acquisitions of Physician Practices That Limit Health Care Access for U.S. Consumers Progressive Policy Institute Diana Moss, Alix Ware, Lief Lin By 2023, more than half of all independent physician practices (IPPs) were no longer independent, but owned by hospitals, health systems, or corporate entities, meaning 78% of all U.S. physicians were employed by large provider organizations. Loss of IPPs through vertical consolidation leads to higher prices, reduced access, loss of physician autonomy, and reduced patient choice. This study highlights […]
Continue Reading Download PDF
The Source’s Katie Gudiksen Joins Upcoming Health Affairs “Purchasing Power Under Pressure” Virtual Event
Megan Bochum November 7, 2025
On November 20, Health Affairs will convene a panel of experts, including The Source’s Executive Editor, Katie Gudiksen, for a virtual roundtable examining the complex interplay of rising healthcare prices, purchasers, and payors. Katie will be joined by Catalyst for Payment Reform’s Executive Director, Andréa Elizabeth Caballero, and the Robert F. Kennedy Medical Plan and the Juan De La Cruz Pension Plan’s Chief Administrator, Patrick Pine, for a deep dive on how employers, unions, and third-party administrators are responding to skyrocketing healthcare prices. Register here to join “Purchasing Power Under […]
Continue Reading Download PDF
The Source Roundup: August 2025 Edition
Megan Bochum August 1, 2025
Healthcare Consolidation Defining Health Care “Corporatization” (The New England Journal of Medicine) Erin C. Fuse Brown In this brief article, Fuse Brown draws on the prescient work of Paul Starr who, in his 1982 book the Social Transformation of American Medicine, foretold the coming of large healthcare conglomerates. Through consolidation, concentration, and increased focus on profits over patients, the author asserts that we have reached the “Gilded Age” of medicine, replete with dissatisfaction for all – producers, providers, and consumers. While Starr’s 40-year-old prediction has proven to be largely accurate, Fuse […]
Continue Reading Download PDF
The Source Roundup: July 2025 Edition
Megan Bochum July 1, 2025
Healthcare Cost Control State Health Care Cost Commissions: Their Priorities and How States’ Political Leanings, Commercial Hospital Prices, and Medicaid Spending Predict Their Establishment (The Milbank Quarterly) Brent D. Fulton, Daniel R. Arnold, Jordan M. Wolf, Richard M. Scheffler As healthcare costs continue to rise, states play an increasingly important role in addressing affordability and cost containment. In this Milbank Quarterly article, researchers examine the political and economic measures in the 17 states that have created Health Care Cost Commissions (HCCCs). HCCCs are independent administrative bodies usually housed in the […]
Continue Reading Download PDF
The Source Roundup: June 2025 Edition
Megan Bochum June 2, 2025
Rural Healthcare Access Rural Hospital Closures Led to Increased Prices at Nearby ‘Surviving’ Hospitals, 2012-22 (Health Affairs) Caitlin Carrol, Jessica Chang Research on how consolidation affects healthcare pricing largely centers on mergers rather than closures. Hospital closures, especially those in rural areas, reallocate patient populations to nearby ‘surviving’ hospitals posing distinct effects on the remaining healthcare market. In theory, reallocation of a patient population can increase production efficiencies and lower costs at the remaining hospital, resulting in savings that could be passed to consumers in the form of lower prices. […]
Continue Reading Download PDF