• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

Three Treatment Options To Consider

May 9, 2025

Microsoft Bans Employees From Using ‘Chinese Propaganda’ Chatbot

May 9, 2025

How Smart Mattresses Improve Sleep Quality For Couples

May 9, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Monday, May 12
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    Security video shows brazen sexual assault of California woman by homeless man

    October 24, 2023

    Woman makes disturbing discovery after her boyfriend chases away home intruder who stabbed him

    October 24, 2023

    Poll finds Americans overwhelmingly support Israel’s war on Hamas, but younger Americans defend Hamas

    October 24, 2023

    Off-duty pilot charged with 83 counts of attempted murder after allegedly trying to shut off engines midflight on Alaska Airlines

    October 23, 2023

    Leaked audio of Shelia Jackson Lee abusively cursing staffer

    October 22, 2023
  • Health

    Disparities In Cataract Care Are A Sorry Sight

    October 16, 2023

    Vaccine Stocks—Including Pfizer, Moderna, BioNTech And Novavax—Slide Amid Plummeting Demand

    October 16, 2023

    Long-term steroid use should be a last resort

    October 16, 2023

    Rite Aid Files For Bankruptcy With More ‘Underperforming Stores’ To Close

    October 16, 2023

    Who’s Still Dying From Complications Related To Covid-19?

    October 16, 2023
  • World

    New York Democrat Dan Goldman Accuses ‘Conservatives in the South’ of Holding Rallies with ‘Swastikas’

    October 13, 2023

    IDF Ret. Major General Describes Rushing to Save Son, Granddaughter During Hamas Invasion

    October 13, 2023

    Black Lives Matter Group Deletes Tweet Showing Support for Hamas 

    October 13, 2023

    AOC Denounces NYC Rally Cheering Hamas Terrorism: ‘Unacceptable’

    October 13, 2023

    L.A. Prosecutors Call Out Soros-Backed Gascón for Silence on Israel

    October 13, 2023
  • Business

    Microsoft Bans Employees From Using ‘Chinese Propaganda’ Chatbot

    May 9, 2025

    OpenAI CEO Warns: ‘Not A Huge Amount Of Time’ Until China Overpowers American AI

    May 9, 2025

    Trump Announces First Post-Tariff Trade Deal

    May 8, 2025

    Electric Vehicle Sales Nosedive As GOP Takes Buzzsaw To Biden’s Mandate

    May 7, 2025

    Tyson Foods Announces It Will Bend The Knee To Trump Admin’s New Rules

    May 7, 2025
  • Finance

    Ending China’s De Minimis Exception Brings 3 Benefits for Americans

    April 17, 2025

    The Trump Tariff Shock Should Push Indonesia to Reform Its Economy

    April 17, 2025

    Tariff Talks an Opportunity to Reinvigorate the Japan-US Alliance

    April 17, 2025

    How China’s Companies Are Responding to the US Trade War

    April 16, 2025

    The US Flip-flop Over H20 Chip Restrictions 

    April 16, 2025
  • Tech

    Cruz Confronts Zuckerberg on Pointless Warning for Child Porn Searches

    February 2, 2024

    FTX Abandons Plans to Relaunch Crypto Exchange, Commits to Full Repayment of Customers and Creditors

    February 2, 2024

    Elon Musk Proposes Tesla Reincorporates in Texas After Delaware Judge Voids Pay Package

    February 2, 2024

    Tesla’s Elon Musk Tops Disney’s Bob Iger as Most Overrated Chief Executive

    February 2, 2024

    Mark Zuckerberg’s Wealth Grew $84 Billion in 2023 as Pedophiles Target Children on Facebook, Instagram

    February 2, 2024
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Health»BJC Healthcare Eyes $10 Billion Union With Saint Luke’s Health System
Health

BJC Healthcare Eyes $10 Billion Union With Saint Luke’s Health System

June 19, 2023No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
BJC Healthcare Eyes $10 Billion Union With Saint Luke’s Health System
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

ST. LOUIS, MO: Barnes-Jewish Hospital on May 8, 2020 (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

A frightening trend is accelerating across the U.S. healthcare delivery landscape. Health systems continue to join forces to weather the economic storms pressuring the industry–exacerbating downward reimbursement and the fallout from financial losses resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic. Scaling up, a dynamic that emerged with increased intensity after passage of the Affordable Care Act, has continued to be a rallying cry for industry executives as the mechanism to enable the delivery of “world-class” care in the face of market pressures. Unfortunately, ’scaling up’ has historically failed to deliver on the promise of better care at lower cost to patients. Despite this, industry executives continue to make this case in defense of consolidation.

Recently, Midwest nonprofits BJC Healthcare and Saint Luke’s Health System announced they are eyeing a massive $10 billion merger. Public statements describe their goal to create “a patient-centric integrated health care system advancing emerging and innovative models of care,” that will “…enhance the quality, access to, and affordability of patient care, while improving health and reducing health disparities in the communities they serve.” These lofty statements come on the heels of Kaiser Permanente’s plans to acquire Geisinger Health–which has been billed as “an innovative move designed to improve the health of communities, achieve better health care outcomes, and improve health care affordability.”

Promises of a new day in healthcare delivery make great press releases. But given the size and revenue of these institutions (e.g., BJC Healthcare: 30,000 employees/$6.3 B revenue) it raises the question of what consolidation can achieve that such an already large system can’t achieve on its own.

Unfortunately, these large, complex organizations are too often siloed and bureaucratic. Increased size too often means they spend precious time and resources dealing with the minutiae and dysfunction associated with more bureaucracy. As that happens, attending to the needs of the patient-consumer fades further into the background. Of the approximately 6,000 U.S. hospitals, only 1,500 still operate independently. Additionally, close to 75% of our nation’s physicians are employed by health systems or other corporate entities, in part a by-product of shrinking reimbursement and overwhelming administrative burden. These trends have caused many physicians to abandon independent and small group practices and run for cover to the ‘safe’ haven and stable paychecks these organizations promise.

Other physicians have headed for the exit doors altogether, a subject I covered at length in a recent column. As consolidation continues, we are moving towards an oligopoly–in which a handful of provider organizations, with immense leverage, will be responsible for delivering care to patients across a wide swath of the country. Given their history of defense of the status quo–that’s concerning.

As I covered at length in my book, Bringing Value to Healthcare, hospitals were never meant to be destinations of choice. They are not in the healthcare business. They are in the sickness business. Efforts to improve quality or prevent unnecessary utilization of diagnostics have not been rewarded. Instead, doctors have been paid to diagnose and treat illness.

Not surprisingly, healthcare delivery organizations have fought tooth and nail to defend a broken payment model, even when they know it no longer serves their customers. They are not interested in reporting on transparency in either the cost or quality associated with the services they offer—despite mandates requiring them to do so. And they fail to make an economic and clinical value argument to justify why someone should come to their facility for treatment. In the case of too many nonprofits, they have strayed far off course from their intended mission and purpose–all at patients’ expense. It is for these reasons that consumers will pay a high price for an industry that seems committed to getting bulkier.

Study after study shows that hospital consolidation does not lower prices or improve the quality of patient care despite the headlines. We also know that the union of two institutions with operational shortcomings only creates one larger institution with more operational shortcomings. Bringing organizations together successfully is hard work. And, the larger an organization becomes, the more it struggles to adapt to increased incursions, like the ones we see today in primary care delivery from the likes of Walmart, CVS Health and Amazon.

But with all the shortcomings and danger that consolidation brings operationally, it begs an ominous question. Is Big Health Care becoming too big to fail?

During Covid, the federal government allocated $175 billion to help healthcare providers, including hospitals, weather the worst of the pandemic, and as The Wall Street Journal found, billions of that aid “enriched some well-off systems.” But one of the most painful lessons hospitals learned during this crisis was that fee-for-service suddenly became a risky business proposition when the cancellation of lucrative elective procedures decimated their balance sheets. At some level, the financial hemorrhaging was avoidable, if they had adopted a different business model based on capitation and health maintenance. All of this conjures up eerie memories of the 2008 banking crisis, when hundreds of billions of dollars were spent to bail out “too big to fail” banks in order to stabilize the nation’s financial system.

As many hospitals and mega health systems continue to struggle financially, there will no doubt continue to be a strong appetite in Washington for Congress to come rushing in to rescue them from malfeasance. Michael Abrams, Managing Partner of Numerof & Associates predicted a decade ago in a presentation at Saint Louis University that “hospitals will have gotten too big to fail and too big to care.” He later opined: “can the government let them [hospitals on the verge of bankruptcy] fail … and leave us to treat our ills with herbal tea? Certainly not!” Dr. Marty Makary of Johns Hopkins University has also echoed similar sentiments.

This leads to the second ominous question: Is Big Health Care also becoming too big to care?

A look at one of the most long-overdue and basic reforms undertaken by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) in 2021 offers an answer to the question. CMS required hospitals to publicly post their prices for 300 “shoppable services” that a healthcare consumer can schedule in advance. The goal was simple: increase transparency, a key ingredient of getting to a market-based model. But as I explained, these and other CMS reforms have been met with fierce resistance at every turn from industry lobby groups that are more interested in maintaining the status quo and helping their clients stay afloat within it. Today, only about 25% of hospitals are fully compliant with the price transparency law and the agency has only fined four hospitals to date for noncompliance.

At a recent congressional hearing on health care price transparency, House Ways and Means Chairman U.S. Representative Jason Smith (R-MO) hit the nail on the head: “we can get more information about a local restaurant from Yelp than you can get about your local hospital from CMS.”

Consolidation in healthcare is here to stay, but this does not bode well for the more than 50% of Americans who have taken a dismal view of healthcare quality. It also does not bode well for the 73% of U.S. adults who say the healthcare system “is not meeting their needs in some way,” with affordability (61%) and is too focused on profit (40%) cited as the top barriers to healthcare access. As we get sicker as a nation, healthcare also gets more expensive, and life expectancy diminishes compared to other developed countries.

The warning signs are scattered everywhere. The road ahead is treacherous, and time is fast running out to take a detour in pursuit of a more patient-centric model. As the saying goes, “old habits die hard.” Given where things are headed, betting on healthcare delivery organizations that are too big to fail and maybe too big to care, is a costly gamble.

See also  Farms Of The Future Will Grow Food While Restoring The Environment
Billion BJC eyes health Healthcare Lukes Saint System Union
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

$15 Billion And Climbing: Trump’s Tariffs Deliver Record High Revenue

April 25, 2025

Understanding The Emotional And Physical Impact Of Elder Abuse On Senior Health

April 17, 2025

The Ancient Practice Helping Modern Women Reclaim Pelvic Health

April 17, 2025

The Surprising Mental Health Tool You Probably Haven’t Tried

April 14, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

OJ Simpson Says Michigan Sign-Stealing Scandal Is Overblown

November 8, 2023

UK economy’s surprise strength puts more BoE rate hikes on table

August 11, 2023

How to Show Up Authentically According to Sheryl Lee Ralph

August 27, 2023

BBC Unveils Disinformation Unit to Monitor ‘Conspiracy Theories’

May 26, 2023
Don't Miss

Three Treatment Options To Consider

Lifestyle May 9, 2025

The most common cause of hair loss in men is male androgenetic alopecia (MAA), otherwise…

Microsoft Bans Employees From Using ‘Chinese Propaganda’ Chatbot

May 9, 2025

How Smart Mattresses Improve Sleep Quality For Couples

May 9, 2025

OpenAI CEO Warns: ‘Not A Huge Amount Of Time’ Until China Overpowers American AI

May 9, 2025
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,112)
  • Entertainment (4,220)
  • Finance (3,202)
  • Health (1,938)
  • Lifestyle (1,629)
  • Politics (3,084)
  • Sports (4,036)
  • Tech (2,006)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (3,944)
Our Picks

Shy Glizzy Allegedly Threatened To Kill Girlfriend And Her Family

May 18, 2023

Trump Leads in General Election Race, Biden’s Support Among Minorities Drops

January 13, 2024

First Israeli Minister Visits Saudi Arabia, as Deal Talk Continues

September 29, 2023
Popular Posts

Three Treatment Options To Consider

May 9, 2025

Microsoft Bans Employees From Using ‘Chinese Propaganda’ Chatbot

May 9, 2025

How Smart Mattresses Improve Sleep Quality For Couples

May 9, 2025
© 2025 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.