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Driving Provider Integration: Implications for Hospitals and Health Systems of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
12/06/2010
On March 23, 2010, President Obama signed into law the most sweeping health care legislation since Medicare was enacted in 1965. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act1 (the “Act”) seeks to transform the American healthcare delivery system through a variety of cutting-edge initiatives and by amending a series of existing laws. The law has been described as allowing the “biggest transformation of government since World War II”2 in its effort to provide increased healthcare coverage to millions of Americans while also seeking to control the spiraling cost of healthcare.
The law will impact hospitals and health systems in numerous ways as it seeks to achieve the two goals of increased coverage and controlling costs. Hospitals will face increased demands for primary and preventive care from an increasing number of patients. At the same time, hospitals will see reimbursement changes, increased reporting requirements relating to quality outcomes and experimentation with new payment models. The result of these changes, assuming the Act is implemented,3 will be an increased drive toward integration of hospitals and healthcare systems as they, along with physicians and other providers, react to this massive transformation of the U.S. healthcare delivery system.
Excerpted from "Driving Provider Integration: Implications for Hospitals and Health Systems of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act," presented to the American Health Lawyers Association, December 6-7, 2010 in Chicago, IL. To read the full article, click on the PDF linked below.
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1 H.R. 3590, the “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act” (P.L. 111 - 148, 124 Stat. 119) was subsequently amended by H.R. 4872, the “Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010” (P.L. 111 – 152, 124 Stat. 1029), as part of the budget reconciliation process.
2 The New York Times, April 18, 2010, interview with David Cutler, Harvard economist and President Obama’s chief campaign adviser of health policy.
3 For an essay on the work facing the Obama Administration as it strives to implement the Act, see The New Yorker, “Now What?” by Atul Gawande (April 5, 2010).