Beaumont-Spectrum merger: history says higher costs, not better care | Bridge Michigan (2024)

The megamerger Tuesday of Michigan health care behemoths Beaumont Health and Spectrum Health will likely mean higher costs for consumers and uncertainty about future quality of care, according to some experts and studies of past U.S. hospital consolidations.

“Whether it’s one hospital joining with another or being bought up by a larger system, there are lots of examples of these around the country, and it never turns out better for patients in terms of their costs, said Bret Jackson, president of the nonprofit Economic Alliance for Michigan, a nonprofit labor-management group with a focus on health care costs containment.

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“It could sometimes mean that there won't be a negative change but most of the time it leads to higher prices,” he said.

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The studies have suggested mergers can lead to both higher costs as the merged systems acquire greater market share and a drop in quality of care.

But that’s not the portrait painted by Beaumont and Spectrum — nor of the state’s hospital industry group and at least one analyst.

Leaders of the newly created BHSH System say the deal will lead to higher quality care and better access. And at least one report — commissioned by the American Hospital Association, an industry group — found that mergers can cut operating costs by more than 3 percent.

“We’re focused on our patients and we’re focused on our people,” Nancy Susick, interim president of BHSH Beaumont Health, told Bridge Michigan. “We really want to improve health care and … make it as affordable as possible for the citizens and consumers in Michigan.”

Spectrum spokesperson Ellen Bristol told Bridge in an email: The goal is to make “health care more accessible, affordable, equitable and exceptional for the patients and members we serve.”

On Tuesday, Southfield-based Beaumont Health and Grand Rapids-based Spectrum Health began business together as a combined, not-for-profit health system.

The merger — first announced in June — creates the largest employer in Michigan with 64,000 staff, including more than 11,500 doctors and specialists and more than 15,000 nurses at 22 hospitals and more than 300 outpatient locations.

It also positions Priority Health, a Grand Rapids-based insurer largely owned by Spectrum, to compete with the insurance giant, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, in southeast Michigan.

Tina Freese Decker, Spectrum’s former president and CEO, assumes the same role for the new BHSH System President & CEO. Beaumont’s board chair, Julie Fream, will assume the same role for the joined BHSH board, which will be made up of seven members of each of the previous systems’ boards.

The behemoth deal was possible after the Federal Trade Commission did not object to the proposed merger. The FTC in September had asked for more documentation, according to Becker’s Hospital Review, an industry publication.

While it represents a tectonic shift in Michigan's hospital landscape, some say it’s not all that surprising.

Hospitals across the country feel the pressure to scale up purchasing power for equipment and supplies, for negotiations with insurers, to attract staff and connect massive electronic medical records systems, said Brian Peters, CEO of the Michigan Health & Hospital Association, a state industry group.

The Beaumont-Spectrum marriage is “emblematic of the fact that there aren't that many independent hospitals left to acquire in Michigan,” Peters said.

“What's happening now is that next logical iteration where you have the larger multi-hospital systems, looking to come together and it's driven by many of the same issues.”

This is not Beaumont’s first fling with consolidation.

Eight years ago, Beaumont essentially absorbed Dearborn-based Oakwood Healthcare and Farmington Hills’ Botsford Hospital in what had been billed as an “affiliation.” The Beaumont-Spectrum merger was Beaumont’s third attempt to further build out its footprint. The health system courted, then fell out, with Summa Health in Ohio and later Advocate Aurora in Illinois and Wisconsin.

By joining forces, Spectrum and Beaumont are better able to serve consumers and reduce costs, said Marianne Udow-Phillips, founder of the Center for Health Research & Transformation, a nonpartisan health policy center based at the University of Michigan.

“We certainly know what they've said publicly — that from a consumer standpoint this will improve efficiencies, improve quality, and they're bringing these two systems together for synergy and to have better data,” she said.

The key, she and others said, is whether any cost-savings are passed onto patients, primarily through their insurance costs.

“The cost of a procedure (or) the cost of an office visit mostly falls on employers and their groups of employees,” said Allan Baumgarten, a Minneapolis-based market analyst who studies trends and organizations in local health markets.

“The reduction in competition increases the market power and the leverage that the large, merged hospital system now has in their negotiations with Blue Cross Blue Shield, or United Healthcare, or Aetna,” he said.

Some experts are optimistic on how well the merger will serve customers.

One healthcare investment specialist said the heft of the new system will help the combined system negotiate best prices for consumers.

Even before the pandemic, hospital systems were facing “choppy waters” of rising staff costs and an aging population that will need more care that will be reimbursed by Medicare, which typically pays less than commercial insurers, said Dave Morlock, managing director, at Cain Brothers, a New York City-based investment banking and strategic advisory firm.

“I think creating bigger, more stable health systems is, in the long run, supportive of creating access to high quality care. That’s a plus to people and consumers,” Morlock said. “The flipside is people will question ‘What does it do to cost?’”

Recent studies suggest that costs to consumers often grow following mergers — even when they involve multiple markets serving distinct patient populations — while the quality of patient care grew worse or stayed about the same.

But Morloc noted the FTC decided not to contest the Spectrum-Beaumont merger. And moving forward, another health care giant — Blue Cross Blue Shield, with its negotiating power — will help provide “guardrails” against unjust price hikes, he said.

Dominick Pallone, executive director of the Michigan Association of Health Plans, which represents nearly all of Michigan’s largest insurers, including Priority, said he’s not immediately worried, either.

The merger may have gotten the federal go-ahead because the hospitals were focused on opposite sides of the state — Beaumont to the southeast corner and Spectrum to the west, he said.

“We would always want to keep an eye on making sure that any provider group — whether it's a hospital, whether that's pharmacies, whether there's primary care docs — you don't want them in one region to all to be owned by the same entity, it would be too large of a controlling interest to too much of a tilt on the power scale,” he said.

“In this case … their footprint doesn't seem to overlap that much,” he said.

For the insurance carrier, Priority, which now can expand into southeast Michigan, this is a “great thing,” he noted.

And, said Peters, of the hospital industry group, hospitals still have to negotiate — no matter their size.

“The real watchword is ‘value,’” he said. “We want to create value and that equation of course, is cost and quality and appropriateness,” he said, adding “higher quality care costs less in the long run.”

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FAQs

Beaumont-Spectrum merger: history says higher costs, not better care | Bridge Michigan? ›

The megamerger Tuesday of Michigan health care behemoths Beaumont Health and Spectrum Health will likely mean higher costs for consumers and uncertainty about future quality of care, according to some experts and studies of past U.S. hospital consolidations.

Is Spectrum Health being bought out? ›

The blockbuster merger of Spectrum Health and Beaumont Health in February of 2022 created a monthslong process, including a couple of name changes, to merge the two large health systems.

Why did Spectrum and Beaumont merge? ›

Dig Deeper. The two facilities aimed to improve health equity, invest in new technologies to expand virtual offerings, and increase access to more affordable healthcare coverage for Michigan residents. The merger deal also offered members access to Spectrum Health's health plan, Priority Health.

What is the new name for Beaumont Spectrum? ›

You may now. The new Beaumont Health Spectrum Health hospital system, known as the BHSH system, announced Tuesday its permanent name: Corewell Health.

Why is Spectrum Health changing their name? ›

The health system announced its new name, Corewell Health, Tuesday, Oct. 11. Tina Freese Decker, president and CEO of Corewell Health, said the new name is a reflection of what the health system is today and where it is going.

Why is Beaumont now Corewell Health? ›

Now, the organization has announced its new identity: Corewell Health. The name reflects the organization' core mission of keeping people well, said Tina Freese Decker, president and CEO of Corewell Health.

Why is spectrum changing their name? ›

Spectrum will be changing its name to Firstline on September 1st. Our service is now used by hundreds of hospital clients around the world. A more distinctive identity is needed to distinguish us as we continue to grow, and extend our clinical guidance capabilities.

Who is the CEO of Spectrum Beaumont merger? ›

Tina Freese Decker, incoming President & CEO of BHSH System, will also serve on the board, as well as an additional board member who will be named later this year. Members of the new board include: Christopher Carpenter, MD. Mark Davidoff.

How many hospitals does Beaumont own? ›

With eight hospitals, 155 outpatient locations, nearly 5,000 physicians and 33,000 employees, Beaumont's commitment to patient and family-centered care contributes to the health and well-being of residents throughout the community and beyond.

Is Beaumont being bought out? ›

Michigan's largest in-state health system finally has a permanent name: Corewell Health. The announcement comes more than 8 months after the merger of Spectrum Health and Beaumont Health. The two systems merged on Feb. 1 after announcing the intent to merge more than a year ago.

What is the new name for Spectrum Butterworth? ›

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. and SOUTHFIELD, Mich. – BHSH System, the new health system formed in February 2022 by Beaumont Health and Spectrum Health, announced its new name today, Corewell Health, signaling its bold commitment to health and wellness.

How many beds does Spectrum Health Butterworth have? ›

Spectrum Health Butterworth Hospital – 852 beds

The Spectrum Health Butterworth Hospital is an 852-bed general acute care teaching hospital in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Why are people leaving Spectrum? ›

All of this comes after a cascade of customer concerns over Spectrum's business practices, including recent cost increases and altered channel programming for Rochester-area residents, both announced in January, and September's dispute with Disney.

Why did our Spectrum bill go up? ›

A change to your bill can occur for a number of reasons: If your service was just installed, you might see one-time fees included for installation or activation of services. When you signed up for services, you received a promotional discounted rate on your bill.

What is Spectrum's old name? ›

From 2009 to 2016, Time Warner Cable was an entirely independent company, continuing to use the Time Warner name under license from its former parent company (including the "Road Runner" name for its Internet service, that was merged into what is now Spectrum Internet).

Is Spectrum being bought out? ›

Verizon Wireless Completes Sale of Spectrum to AT&T (update) | News Release | Verizon.

Who is Spectrum merging with? ›

They culminated with a mid-2021 agreement to merge Grand Rapids-based Spectrum Health and Southfield-based Beaumont Health into a single health system with an ambitious goal to improve health and the quality of health care across the state.

Who owns Spectrum Medical? ›

Steve Turner is the CEO, co-founder and majority owner of Spectrum Medical.

Who did Priority Health merge with? ›

(Detroit – January 6, 2020): Priority Health, Michigan's second-largest health insurance plan, announced today that the company's merger with Total Health Care is now complete.

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