FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AT
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1996 (202) 616-2771
TDD (202) 514-1888
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT WILL NOT CHALLENGE MERGER
OF ANNAPOLIS ANESTHESIOLOGISTS
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Sixteen independent
anesthesiologists who currently provide services at Anne Arundel
Medical Center in Annapolis, Maryland, will be allowed to merge
into a single, integrated practice group in order to contract
more efficiently with managed care and other third party payers,
according to a Business Review Letter issued today by the
Department's Antitrust Division.
The sixteen physicians providing anesthesia services at
Anne Arundel Medical Center are not under contract with the
hospital, and only a few of them currently contract with third
party payers. By merging into one integrated group, the doctors
will be able to contract with the medical center to provide all
needed anesthesia services, just as other integrated physician
groups already do to provide radiology, pathology, and emergency
room services.
Anne Arundel Medical Center is eager to offer managed
care plans and employers global, or all-inclusive, fees covering
all
hospital services for certain procedures such as appendectomies.
The proposed merger will facilitate such global fee arrangements.
By contracting with all its anesthesiologists under a single
contract and fee schedule, the medical center will know its costs
and be able to develop global pricing.
According to the business review letter from Assistant
Attorney General Anne Bingaman to Dr. Terry Smith, Chief of
Anesthesiology at Anne Arundel Medical Center, payers in the area
have told the Department that they prefer to deal with an
integrated group of anesthesiologists in order to provide full
coverage for their patients, and in order to avoid complicated
scheduling problems. Payers have also expressed impatience with
the medical center's inability to offer global pricing, and in
fact have begun to move elective surgeries to other hospitals
that do offer global fees.
It does not appear that the merger of these physicians
will create anticompetitive market power or substantially lessen
competition in the market for anesthesia services. Payers and
Anne Arundel Medical Center have both indicated that they can
turn to alternative providers if the merged doctors attempt to
unreasonably raise prices for anesthesia services at the
hospital.
Bingaman added, "it is quite likely that the exclusive
provision of anesthesia services at Anne Arundel Medical Center
will create efficiencies that result when exclusive contracts for
in-house physician services are appropriately implemented."
Under the Department's business review procedure, an
organization may submit a proposed action to the Antitrust
Division and receive a statement whether the Division will
challenge the action under the antitrust laws.
A file containing the business review request and the
Department's response may be examined in the Legal Procedure Unit
of the Antitrust Division, Room 215 North, Liberty Place,
Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. 20530. After a 30-day
waiting period, the documents supporting the business review will
be added to the file.
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