Abstract
To determine whether inpatient and outpatient charges changed at rural hospitals after a merger. Hospital mergers were derived from proprietary Irving Levin Associates data through manual review and validation. Hospital-level characteristics were derived from HCRIS, CMS Impact File Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System, Hospital MSA file, AHRF, and US Census data. A difference-in-differences approach was used to determine whether inpatient and outpatient charges changed at rural hospitals after a merger. The comparison group, rural hospitals that did not merge at any point during the sample period, was weighted using inverse probability of treatment weights. Key outcome measures were total inpatient and total outpatient charges (logged). Hospitals that merged billed 17.73% more inpatient charges and 12.66% more outpatient charges at baseline compared to hospitals that did not merge. Our results indicate that merging was associated with a 3.04% decrease in inpatient charges (P<.001) and a 1.07% increase in outpatient charges (P=.082). Merging was also associated with a 4.38% decrease in total revenue, a 3.58% decrease in net patient revenue, and no change in total inpatient discharges or average daily census. Merging was strongly associated with a decrease in inpatient charges and somewhat associated with an increase in outpatient charges for rural hospitals. Future work could build upon this work to determine whether acquirers reduce or eliminate certain services at rural hospitals after a merger, and ultimately how changes in service delivery could impact patients in those rural communities.
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More From: The Journal of rural health : official journal of the American Rural Health Association and the National Rural Health Care Association
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