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Specialty Versus Community Hospitals: What Role For The Law?
33
Citations
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References
2005
Year
LawMedicolegal IssueSurgeryFinancial ProtectionHealth Care FinanceHealth LawLegal LensPrimary CareMedical LawHealth FinancingInsurance RegulationsPublic HealthInsuranceHealth Services ResearchHealth Insurance ReformHealth PolicyOffer ConjecturesHealth InsuranceHealth Care DeliveryHealth EconomicsU.s. Health CareHealth Services CompetitionHealth Care CostMedicine
U.S. health care has long featured a struggle between regulation and markets as vehicles of reform, and the community hospital is at the center of this struggle. The key to its financial viability is cross-subsidization, whereby revenues from insured patients subsidize the care of the uninsured and underinsured, and profits from well-compensated services support those operating at a loss. Cross-subsidization has been challenged by efforts to move highly compensated services and well-insured patients to ambulatory surgical centers and specialty hospitals. We review the ongoing battle between through a legal lens and offer conjectures about the outcome. Refined certificate-of-need regulation may be the preferable policy choice.
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