Health & Fitness
Hospital Giant Sutter Health Faces Legal Reckoning Over Medical Pricing
A long-awaited class-action lawsuit against Sutter is set to open Sept. 23 in San Francisco Superior Court.
By Jenny Gold, Kaiser Health News
Originally published Tuesday, September 10
This story also ran on Los Angeles Times.
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SAN FRANCISCO, CA â Economists and researchers long have blamed the high cost of health care in Northern California on the giant medical systems that have gobbled up hospitals and physician practices â most notably Sutter Health, a nonprofit chain with 24 hospitals, 34 surgery centers and 5,000 physicians across the region.
Now, those arguments will have their day in court: A long-awaited class-action lawsuit against Sutter is set to open Sept. 23 in San Francisco Superior Court.
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The hospital giant, with $13 billion in operating revenue in 2018, stands accused of violating Californiaâs antitrust laws by leveraging its market power to drive out competition and overcharge patients. Health care costs in Northern California, where Sutter is dominant, are 20% to 30% higher than in Southern California, even after adjusting for cost of living, according to a 2018 study from the Nicholas C. Petris Center at the University of California-Berkeley cited in the complaint.
The case was initiated in 2014 by self-funded employers and union trusts that pay for worker health care. It since has been joined with a similar case brought last year by California Attorney General Xavier Becerra. The plaintiffs seek up to $900 million in damages for overpayments that they attribute to Sutter; under Californiaâs antitrust law, the award can be tripled, leaving Sutter liable for up to $2.7 billion.
The case is being followed closely by industry leaders and academics alike.
âThis case could be huge. It could be existential,â said Glenn Melnick, a health care economist at the University of Southern California. If the case is successful, he predicted, health care prices could drop significantly in Northern California. It also could have a âchilling effectâ nationally for large health systems that have adopted similar negotiating tactics, he said.
The case already has proved controversial: In November 2017, San Francisco County Superior Court Judge Curtis E.A. Karnow sanctioned Sutter after finding it had intentionally destroyed 192 boxes of documents sought by plaintiffs, âknowing that the evidence was relevant to antitrust issues.â He wrote: âThere is no good explanation for the specific and unusual destruction here.â
Antitrust enforcement is more commonly within the purview of the Federal Trade Commission and U.S. Department of Justice. âOne of the reasons we have such a big problem [with consolidation] is that theyâve done very little. Enforcement has been very weak,â said Richard Scheffler, director of the Nicholas C. Petris Center. From 2010 to 2017, there were more than 800 hospital mergers, and the federal government has challenged just a handful.
âWe feel very confident,â said Richard Grossman, lead counsel for the plaintiffs. âSutter has been able to elevate their prices above market to the tune of many hundreds of millions of dollars.â
Or, as Attorney General Becerra put it at a news conference unveiling his 2018 lawsuit: âThis is a big âFâ deal.â
Sutter vigorously denies the allegations, saying its large, integrated health system offers tangible benefits for patients, including more consistent high-quality care. Sutter also disputes that its prices are higher than other major health care providers in California, saying its internal analyses tell a different story.
âThis lawsuit irresponsibly targets Sutterâs integrated system of hospitals, clinics, urgent care centers and affiliated doctors serving millions of patients throughout Northern California,â spokeswoman Amy Thoma Tan wrote in an emailed statement. âWhile insurance companies want to sell narrow networks to employers, integrated networks like Sutterâs benefit patient care and experience, which leads to greater patient choice and reduces surprise out-of-network bills to our patients.â
Thereâs no dispute that for years Sutter has worked aggressively to buy up hospitals and doctor practices in communities throughout Northern California. At issue in the case is how it has used that market dominance.
According to the lawsuit, Sutter has exploited its market power by using an âall-or-noneâ approach to contracting with insurance companies. The tactic â known as the âSutter Modelâ â involves sitting down at the negotiating table with a demand: If an insurer wants to include any one of the Sutter hospitals or clinics in its network, it must include all of them. In Sutterâs case, several of its 24 hospitals are âmust-haves,â meaning it would be almost impossible for an insurer to sell an insurance plan in a given community without including those facilities in the network.
âAll-or-noneâ contracting allows hospital systems to demand higher prices from an insurer with little choice but to acquiesce, even if it might be cheaper to exclude some of the systemâs hospitals that are more expensive than a competitorâs. Those higher prices trickle down to consumers in the form of higher premiums.
The California Hospital Association contends such negotiations are crucial for hospitals struggling financially. âIt can be a great benefit to small hospitals and rural hospitals that donât have a lot of bargaining power to have a larger group that can negotiate on their behalf,â said Jackie Garman, the CHAâs legal counsel.
Sutter also is accused of preventing insurers and employers from tiering benefits, a technique used to steer patients to more cost-effective options. For example, an insurer might charge $100 out-of-pocket for a procedure at a preferred surgery center, but $200 at a more expensive facility. In addition, the lawsuit alleges that for years Sutter restricted insurers from sharing information about its prices with employers and workers, making it nearly impossible to compare prices when selecting a provider.
Altogether, the plaintiffs allege, such tactics are anti-competitive and have allowed Sutter to drive up the cost of care in Northern California.
Hospitals in California and other regions across the country have watched the success of such tactics and taken note. âAll the other hospitals want to emulate [Sutter] to get those rates,â said Anthony Wright, executive director of the advocacy group Health Access.
A verdict that finds such tactics illegal would âsend a signal to the market that the way to compete is not to be the next Sutter,â said Wright. âYou want them to compete instead by providing better quality service at a lower price, not just by who can get bigger and thus leverage a higher price.â
Along with damages, Becerraâs complaint calls for dismantling the Sutter Model. It asks that Sutter be required to negotiate prices separately for each of its hospitals â and prohibit officials at different hospitals from sharing details of their negotiations. While leaving Sutter intact, the approach would give insurers more negotiating room, particularly in communities with competing providers.
Consolidation in the health care industry is likely here to stay: Two-thirds of hospitals across the nation are part of larger medical systems. âItâs very hard to unscramble the egg,â said Melnick.
California legislators have attempted to limit the âall or nothingâ contracting terms several times, but the legislation has stalled amid opposition from the hospital industry.
Now the courts will weigh in.
Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.