FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AT
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1996 (202) 616-2771
TDD (202) 514-1888
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT WILL NOT CHALLENGE THE FORMATION OF
A NETWORK OF CINCINNATI ORTHOPEDIC SURGEONS
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- A group of Cincinnati orthopedic
surgeons will be allowed to form a network to contract with
health benefit plans to provide plan members with orthopedic
services, the Department of Justice announced today.
Cincinnati Regional Orthopedic and Sports Medicine
Associates will be a non-exclusive physician network joint
venture that negotiates and contracts directly with managed care
plans and other third party payers.
Assistant Attorney General Anne K. Bingaman of the Antitrust
Division said that the Department will not challenge the
network's plans because they do not raise substantial antitrust
concerns. The network will involve significant risk sharing
among member physicians, and will include utilization review and
quality assurance monitoring. The network also has established
safeguards on the flow of information among its physician members
to eliminate enforcement concerns about the sharing of
information.
Cincinnati Regional Orthopedic and Sports Medicine
Association's network will be comprised of 56 of the 158
orthopedic surgeons in the greater Cincinnati metropolitan area,
which includes 28 counties in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. This
35 percent market share is slightly more than the antitrust
safety zone of 30 percent for non-exclusive networks established
in Statement 8 of the 1996 Statements of Antitrust Enforcement
Policy in Health Care, issued recently by the Department of
Justice and the Federal Trade Commission. However, as the
Department has emphasized, proposals that do not meet safety zone
requirements are not necessarily unlawful and the proposed
activities here do not raise substantial antitrust concerns when
fully analyzed under the analytical principles set forth in the
Statement 8.
The network's contracts with health benefit plans will
initially provide for physician services compensation in the form
of capitated payments. At a later date, the network may offer
services under a discounted fee-for-service schedule with a "risk
pool" withhold of at least 20 percent of the fees due each
physician. The withhold would be distributed to participating
physicians only if the panel of doctors as a group meets pre-established efficiency and quality parameters.
The proposed network has the potential to benefit managed
care plans and their enrollees through efficiencies that may
result from the payers' ability to contract with a group of
providers through a single representative, and from the
utilization review and quality assurance monitoring measures that
will be performed.
Under the Department's business review procedure, an
organization may submit a proposed action to the Antitrust
Division and receive a statement as to whether the Division will
challenge the action under the antitrust laws. A file containing
the business review request and the Department's request 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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96-487