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  • January 2, 2020
  • Article
  • New England Journal of Medicine

Changes in Quality of Care After Hospital Mergers and Acquisitions

By: Nancy Dean Beaulieu, Leemore S. Dafny, B. E. Landon, Jesse Dalton, Ifedayo Kuye and J. Michael McWilliams
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Abstract

Background: The hospital industry has consolidated substantially during the past two decades and at an accelerated pace since 2010. Multiple studies have shown that hospital mergers have led to higher prices for commercially insured patients, but research about effects on quality of care is limited.
Methods: Using Medicare claims and Hospital Compare data from 2007 through 2016 on performance on four measures of quality of care (a composite of clinical-process measures, a composite of patient-experience measures, mortality, and the rate of readmission after discharge) and data on hospital mergers and acquisitions occurring from 2009 through 2013, we conducted difference-in-differences analyses comparing changes in the performance of acquired hospitals from the time before acquisition to the time after acquisition with concurrent changes for control hospitals that did not have a change in ownership.
Results: The study sample included 246 acquired hospitals and 1986 control hospitals. Being acquired was associated with a modest differential decline in performance on the patient-experience measure (adjusted differential change, −0.17 SD; 95% confidence interval [CI], −0.26 to −0.07; P=0.002; the change was analogous to a fall from the 50th to the 41st percentile) and no significant differential change in 30-day readmission rates (−0.10 percentage points; 95% CI, −0.53 to 0.34; P=0.72) or in 30-day mortality (−0.03 percentage points; 95% CI, −0.20 to 0.14; P=0.72). Acquired hospitals had a significant differential improvement in performance on the clinical-process measure (0.22 SD; 95% CI, 0.05 to 0.38; P=0.03), but this could not be attributed conclusively to a change in ownership because differential improvement occurred before acquisition.
Conclusions: Hospital acquisition by another hospital or hospital system was associated with modestly worse patient experiences and no significant changes in readmission or mortality rates. Effects on process measures of quality were inconclusive. (Funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.)

Keywords

Hospitals; Mergers and Acquisitions; Health Care and Treatment; Quality

Citation

Beaulieu, Nancy Dean, Leemore S. Dafny, B. E. Landon, Jesse Dalton, Ifedayo Kuye, and J. Michael McWilliams. "Changes in Quality of Care After Hospital Mergers and Acquisitions." New England Journal of Medicine 382, no. 1 (January 2, 2020): 51–59.
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About The Author

Leemore S. Dafny

General Management
→More Publications

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More from the Authors
  • Cigna-Express Scripts: Can a Vertical Merger Rescue an Industry Under Attack? By: Leemore Dafny
  • Giving a Buck or Making a Buck? Donations by Pharmaceutical Manufacturers to Independent Patient Assistance Charities By: Leemore Dafny, Christopher Ody and Teresa Rokos
  • Two Approaches to Capping Health Care Prices By: Michael E. Chernew, Maximilian J. Pany and Leemore S. Dafny
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