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- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: Nigel Allen <nigel.allen@canrem.com>
- Subject: DOJ Issues Business Review Letter of Cleveland Area Hospitals
- Message-ID: <1993Jan11.194427.16239@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: Echo Beach, Toronto
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 1993 19:44:27 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 61
-
- [Note from NDA: Here is a press release from the U.S. Department of
- Justice. It is an interesting reflection on the bureaucracy inherent in
- the U.S. health care system. In Canada, negotiations between
- provincial health ministries and doctors occur on a province-wide
- basis and cover all doctors, except in Quebec where family physicians
- (general practitioners) negotiate separately from specialists.]
-
- DOJ Issues Business Review Letter of Cleveland Area Hospitals
- To: National Desk, Ohio Correspondents
- ontact: Gina Talamona of the U.S. Department of Justice,
- 202-514-2007
-
- WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 -- The Department of Justice announced
- today that it does not intend to challenge under the antitrust laws
- a proposal by Case Western Reserve University School
- of Medicine (Case Western) and University Hospitals of Cleveland
- (UHC) to use a single agent to negotiate contract terms and fees with
- third-party payers on behalf of the 19 separate physician practice
- groups that provide medical care at UHC.
- The department's position was set forth in a business review
- letter from J. Mark Gidley, acting assistant attorney general in
- charge of the Antitrust Division, to Gregory G. Binford, counsel for
- UHC, a teaching hospital affiliated with Case Western.
- Under the proposal, UHC would designate a single agent to
- negotiate with third-party payers on behalf of all the physicians who
- are organized into different practice groups according to medical
- specialties. Each practice group would provide the agent with a list
- of medical procedures and related ranges of prices for negotiating
- fees for each procedure.
- Third-party payers would be advised that they would be free to
- conduct negotiations directly with any practice group. Each practice
- group, similarly, would be free to conduct negotiations directly with
- a third-party payer. If the negotiations proceeded through the
- agent, each practice group still would be free to accept or reject
- the agent-negotiated contract. If any group rejected the negotiated
- contract, that practice group could renegotiate or decide not to
- contract. Any contract entered into for a practice group would be
- independent from any other practice group's contract.
- Although there are overlapping procedures between some of the
- physician practice groups, the practice groups do not compete
- meaningfully with each other. Further, the safeguards built into the
- proposal ensure that it is unlikely to increase the availability of
- fee and cost information among competing providers and therefore is
- unlikely to facilitate collusion. For example, third-party payers
- can contract directly with the practice groups if they prefer, and
- maintain confidentiality of fee information received from each
- practice group.
- Moreover, there appears to be a procompetitive justification for
- the proposal. Each of the 19 practice groups separately negotiates
- and contracts with third-party payers. This system has become
- burdensome and unwieldy because it results in 19 different
- negotiations and contracts. Changing the method of negotiation is
- expected to lower the costs associated with contracting by expediting
- negotiations and facilitating the bargaining process.
- -30-
- --
- Nigel Allen, Toronto, Ontario, Canada nigel.allen@canrem.com
- --
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