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Hospitals' Geographic Expansion in Quest of Well-Insured Patients: Will the Outcome be Better Care, More Cost, or Both?

April 2012
Health Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 4
Emily Carrier, Marisa K. Dowling, Robert A. Berenson

The emphasis that hospitals place on cutting-edge technology and niche specialty services to attract physicians and patients has set the stage for health care’s most recent competitive trend: an increased level of targeted, geographic service expansion to “capture” well-insured patients. Researchers conducted interviews in twelve U.S. communities in 2010 and found that many hospital systems—some with facilities in geographically undesirable areas—have expanded to compete for better-insured patients by building or buying facilities and physician practices in nearby, more affluent communities. Along with extending services to new markets, these hospital outposts often serve to pull well-insured patients to flagship facilities. The acceleration and expansion of such geographically competitive strategies by hospitals has implications for cost and access. Although payers and competitors contend such strategies will lead to higher costs, hospitals assert the expansions will increase efficiency, increase access, and improve the quality of care provided to patients.

Access to this article is available at the Health Affairs Web site. (Subscription required.)

 

 

 


 

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The Center for Studying Health System Change Ceased operation on Dec. 31, 2013.