Publication
“Who Can Rein in Health Care Prices? State and Federal Efforts to Address Health Care Provider Consolidation”
Decades of ineffective antitrust enforcement have left many US health care markets with insufficient competition to control prices. Increasingly, hospitals have merged to form dominant health systems that can exert market power and charge anticompetitive prices. This trend contributes to health care cost growth that exceeds growth in wages or the economy. Effective oversight of market conduct requires collaboration between state and federal policymakers. This brief describes actions taken by federal and state policymakers to address the consequences of health care provider concentration through increased price transparency, improved merger review, oversight of anticompetitive conduct, and increased competition through a public option.
Download the report here.
Source Sightings
California’s Sutter Health Settlement: What States Can Learn About Protecting Residents from the Effects of Health Care Provider Consolidation
CHS’ Texas hospital sales could raise costs, lower quality: FTC
Surprise Billing: A Window into the U.S. Health Care System
Preventing Anticompetitive Contracting Practices in Healthcare Markets
State Efforts to Address Health Care Consolidation and Costs