Here are my comments to the Court on the proposed settlement offered by the Attorney General and Partners Healthcare System. (I include them here even though the AG has recently asked for a delay
in the court proceeding until after the primary election in September.)
I've previously posted excerpts from Professor Alan Sager's comments. I'm sure there are many more that will be submitted in objection to this deal. If you have filed comments, please send them to me at goalplayleadership [at] gmail [dot] com, and I'll do my best to publish excerpts. Thanks!
Re: Comments on the Proposed Final Judgment in Massachusetts v.
Partners Healthcare System, Inc., South Shore Health and Educational Corp., and
Hallmark Health Corp., Civ. No. 14-2033 (BLS).
I offer these
comments in this proceeding as a citizen of the Commonwealth. For the benefit of the Court, I first include
a short summary of my professional background with regard to matters of market
power in general and the state’s health care system in specific. I then turn to the substance of my arguments.
Following receipt
of degrees from MIT in 1974, including a bachelor of science degree in
economics, I have had almost forty years of experience in service in public
agencies and non-profit institutions. In
many of these positions, I have had to deal with and rule on matters related to
market power and make determinations about how to best serve the public
interest. For example, when I was
Chairman of the Department of Public Utilities (1983-1987), I issued rulings
concerning the manner in which competition should be introduced and encouraged
in the electric power industry, the natural gas industry, the
telecommunications industry, and the transportation common carrier industry. Before holding that position, I participated
as an expert witness (from 1981 to 1983) before several public utility
commissions across America and offered advice to those bodies on how to deal
with the extraordinary market and pricing power of the Bell Operating
Companies—before those companies were divested from AT&T as a result of a
Consent Decree before the US District Court for the District of Columbia in United
States v. AT&T. Following my service at the MA DPU, I served as the
arbitrator under the Telecommunications Act of 1996 to determine the pricing
regime and other aspects of introducing competition into the local exchange
market in Massachusetts. I have
published numerous articles on the issues surrounding regulation of public
utilities and telecommunications companies, and particularly on the transition
from regulated markets to competitive markets.
Since 2006, I have
served as a member of the Board of Directors of ISO-New England, the non-profit
corporation charged with overseeing and regulating the wholesale electric power
market in the region. Among other
responsibilities, the Board is charged with ensuring that market participants
do not engage in abuse of market power in the purchase and sale of electric
power.
My experience in
the health care marketplace of Massachusetts began when I was Executive Dean
for Administration of Harvard Medical School (1998-2002). This was followed by service as Chief
Executive officer of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (2002-2011). In the latter capacity, I had the opportunity
to view the dominant provider group, Partners Healthcare System (PHS), exercise
substantial and growing market power.
Since leaving BIDMC, I have remained active in the health care field and
have been invited by numerous audiences domestically and abroad to speak on
health care matters. I have continued to
observe and write about this field and have documented the ongoing market power
of PHS and the deleterious effect the exercise of such market power has on the
public interest.
Turning to the
instant case, the Attorney General offers the Court her interpretation of the
appropriate standard of review for the proposed final judgment. I excerpt a section of her filing:
Judicial review of consent judgments is primarily focused
on legality and considerations of procedural fairness. Courts properly review
consent judgments to ensure several core requirements are met. First, a court
should ensure that they are not ordering conduct that contravenes the law.
Second, a court should ensure that any terms that the court might one day have
to enforce are reasonably clear. Third, a court should ensure that the consent
judgment relates to a genuine dispute by virtue of having some reasonable
relationship to the claims asserted.
As in any case in which the Attorney General seeks injunctive relief, the court must consider the public interest. But the public interest inquiry is a narrow one: the inquiry is not "what the district court believes might have been the optimal settlement" the court's duty is to determine "whether the settlement is within the reaches of the public interest." [Cites omitted.]
As in any case in which the Attorney General seeks injunctive relief, the court must consider the public interest. But the public interest inquiry is a narrow one: the inquiry is not "what the district court believes might have been the optimal settlement" the court's duty is to determine "whether the settlement is within the reaches of the public interest." [Cites omitted.]
It is not my place, nor do I have legal expertise, to
suggest a different standard of review.
Instead, I respectfully offer my opinion and advice to the Court as to
how it might interpret that standard of review—as a general matter and with
specific regard to the case at hand. I
believe that the Attorney General has the burden of demonstrating that such a
standard has been met. In summary, it is
my recommendation that the Court rule that she has not done so. If the Court agrees, the remedies—as I understand
them—are to deny the motion altogether or to return it to the parties with
instructions to renegotiate an improved settlement.
In applying the Attorney General’s advice that the proposed settlement
must be within “the reaches of the public interest,” we must demand that the
result achieved is no worse than the status quo and preferably better than the
status quo. In that regard, we have the
benefit of the Attorney General’s own work products over the years. She has concluded that the disparity in rates
charged by PHS is not the result of a higher level of quality offered by that
organization, but that it is a result solely of the exercise of market
power. She has also concluded that such
price disparities are, in themselves, a source of ever-rising health care costs
for the citizens of Massachusetts. In
other words, the mere existence of those disparities makes things worse for the
consumers of the Commonwealth.
At a minimum, then, we would hope that a settlement with PHS would act firmly and decisively to reduce those disparities—and quickly enough to make a difference. It is not enough to have the hope that the proposed settlement would achieve this result: The end must be measurable and enforceable.
At a minimum, then, we would hope that a settlement with PHS would act firmly and decisively to reduce those disparities—and quickly enough to make a difference. It is not enough to have the hope that the proposed settlement would achieve this result: The end must be measurable and enforceable.
At heart, instead, the proposed settlement offers a wish and
a prayer towards this result. Yes, the
rates for PHS would be limited to the rate of inflation. Theoretically, other hospitals and physician
groups might then “catch up” if their own rate increases exceeded those of
PHS. However, other providers have not
been able to receive rate increases above that of PHS. There is nothing in the settlement that
empowers them to do so, and, indeed, the settlement cannot force insurers to do
what they have never done before.
Further, even if providers could get such preferential
treatment, the base upon which rate increases would be granted compared to the already
substantially higher rates garnered by PHS forecloses the possibility of
narrowing the gap by any appreciable amount within any reasonable time frame. By allowing the disparity of rates to continue, the Attorney
General offers a result that is worse than the status quo. That disparity permits PHS to accumulate additional
revenues disproportionate to the value it provides to society, extracting ever-increasing
funds from the public, and giving it the resources to engage in further
expansion, magnifying its market power.
The Attorney General ignores her own conclusion from her past analyses,
turning a blind eye to the fact that it cannot be in the public interest to
permit a dominant provider to become still more dominant.
If the Court concludes that the public interest standard
must result in a reasonable probability that the result will be better than the status quo, the proposed
settlement obviously fails for the same reasons. But the problem is compounded in that the proposed
settlement gives explicit permission for PHS to acquire new hospitals and new
physicians, expanding its geographic reach and its dominance.
As others will point out, conduct remedies of the sort
contained in the proposed settlement are clearly inferior to blocking an
anticompetitive merger. Such conduct
measures are typically unsuccessful, in part because antitrust enforcers and
courts lack the expertise and institutional capability to adequately regulate
firms with market power. In part, too, there are inevitable disputes before the
courts as to whether the merger proponent has complied with such measures. It is for these reasons that federal enforcement
agencies and courts have rejected these types of conduct remedies in hospital
mergers and other cases.
When faced with similar issues in this or other sectors, the
federal government has ordered divestiture of key productive assets, or it has
declined to permit mergers. I recognize that the Court may not have the
authority to order such a result in this case, but it certainly does have the
authority to conclude that the proposals and conduct remedies included in this
proposed settlement do not meet the public interest. I respectfully suggest
that Court reach such a conclusion.
Sincerely,
Paul F. Levy
2 comments:
I find this entire process very puzzling, but if one accepts at face value the AG's caution to the court essentially not to exceed its brief , at the very least the court is supposed to determine the truth of her assertion that the agreement is in the public interest and does not violate any laws, as Paul points out. It seems to me the burden of proof should lie with her office that it does both of those things, rather than mere assertions on her part which then must be somehow disproven by all the commenters, or else discerned somehow by the court itself.
As such, I wonder if she should be required to prove that the agreement does not violate MA's health care cost containment law passed in 2012, in which the Health Policy Commission is tasked with 'setting and enforcing the health care cost growth benchmark." If the HPC says this agreement would not meet that benchmark, then how is it legal?
Also, how does this agreement fit in with the specific goal of the 2012 legislation that health care cost growth not exceed the state's economic growth overall? (I am using gross generalities to paraphrase the language in the law). Has the AG done any such analysis, or should she be required to?
It just seems this is all very much arbitrary on her part and the court is supposed to accept her judgement without any evidence. Evidence should be demanded.
And that is notwithstanding her brazen hypocrisy in 'negotiating' such a sellout, after all of her pointed comments dating back to 2010 and previously about Partners' disparate market power. If this is the result of her 'antitrust investigation', one wonders whether an investigation of the dog catcher would be carried out any better.
I wonder why she didn't 'just say no'. No, Partners, you can't annex these two hospitals. Simple; no lawsuits and no agreements. Anyone know why?
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