Promedica Health System, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission

749 F.3d 559, 2014 WL 1584835, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 7500
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 2014
Docket12-3583
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 749 F.3d 559 (Promedica Health System, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Promedica Health System, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission, 749 F.3d 559, 2014 WL 1584835, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 7500 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge.

This is an antitrust case involving a proposed merger between two of the four hospital systems in Lucas County, Ohio. The parties to the merger were ProMedi-ca, by far the county’s dominant hospital provider, and St. Luke’s, an independent community hospital. The two merged in August 2010, leaving ProMedica with a market share above 50% in one relevant product market (for so-called primary and secondary services) and above 80% in another (for obstetrical services). Five months later, the Federal Trade Commission challenged the merger under § 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18. After extensive hearings, an Administrative Law Judge and later the Commission found that the merger would adversely affect competition in violation of § 7. The Commission therefore ordered ProMedica to divest St. Luke’s. ProMedica now petitions for review of the Commission’s order, arguing that the Commission was wrong on both the law and the facts in its analysis of the merger’s competitive effects. We think the Commission was right on both counts, and deny the petition.

I.

A.

Lucas County is located in the northwestern corner of Ohio, with approximately 440,000 residents. Toledo lies near the county’s center; more affluent suburbs lie to the southwest. Two-thirds of the county’s patients have government-provided health insurance, such as Medicare or Medicaid. Twenty-nine percent of the county’s patients have private health insurance, which pays significantly higher rates to hospitals than government-provided insurance does. (Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements generally do not cover the providers’ actual cost of services.) A relatively large proportion of the county’s privately insured patients reside in the county’s southwestern corner.

This case concerns the market — or markets, depending on how one defines them — for “general acute-care” (GAC) inpatient services in Lucas County. GAC comprises four basic categories of services. The most basic are “primary services,” such as hernia surgeries, radiology services, and most kinds of inpatient obstetrical (OB) services. “Secondary services,” such as hip replacements and bariatric surgery, require the hospital to have more specialized resources. “Tertiary services,” such as brain surgery and treatments for severe burns, require even more specialized resources. And “quaternary services,” *562 such as major organ transplants, require the most specialized resources of all.

Different hospitals offer different levels of these services. There are four hospital providers in Lucas County. The most dominant is ProMedica, with 46.8% of the GAC market in Lucas County in 2009. ProMedica operates three hospitals in the county, which together provide primary (including OB), secondary, and tertiary services. The county’s second-largest provider is Mercy Health Partners, with 28.7% of the GAC market in 2009. Mercy likewise operates three hospitals in the county, which together provide primary (including OB), secondary, and tertiary services. The University of Toledo Medical Center (UTMC) is the county’s third-largest provider, with 13% of the GAC market. UTMC operates a single teaching and research hospital, just south of downtown Toledo, and focuses on tertiary and quaternary services. It does not offer OB services. The remaining provider is St. Luke’s Hospital, which before the merger was an independent, not-for-profit hospital with 11.5% of the GAC market. St. Luke’s offers primary (including OB) and secondary services, and is located in southwest Lucas County.

B.

With respect to privately insured patients, hospital providers do not all receive the same rates for the same services. Far from it: each hospital negotiates its rates with private insurers (known as Managed Care Organizations, or MCOs); and the rates themselves are determined by each party’s bargaining power.

•The parties’ bargaining power depends on a variety of factors. An MCO’s bargaining power depends primarily on the number of patients it can offer a hospital provider. Hospitals need patients like stores need customers; and hence the greater the number of patients that an MCO can offer a provider, the greater the MCO’s leverage in negotiating the hospital’s rates. But MCOs compete with each other just as hospitals do. And to attract patients, an MCO’s health-care plan must offer a comprehensive range of services— primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary — within a geographic range that patients are willing to travel for each of those services. (The range is greater for some services than others.) These criteria in turn create leverage for hospitals to raise rates: to the extent patients view a hospital’s services as desirable or even essential — say, because of the hospital’s location or its reputation for quality — the hospital’s bargaining power increases.

But another important criterion for a plan’s competitiveness is its cost. Thus, if a hospital demands rates above a certain level — the so-called “walk-away” point— the MCO will try to assemble a network without that provider. For example, rather than include all four hospital providers in its network, the MCO might include only three. If a provider becomes so dominant in a particular market that no MCO can walk away from it and remain competitive, however, then that provider can demand — and more to the point receive— monopoly rates (ie., prices significantly higher than what the MCOs would pay in a competitive market).

Here, before the merger, MCOs in Lucas County had sometimes offered networks that included all four hospital providers, but sometimes offered networks that included only three. From 2001 until 2008, for example, Lucas County’s largest MCO, Medical Mutual of Ohio, successfully marketed a network of Mercy, UTMC, and St. Luke’s. Since 2000, however, no MCO has offered a network that did not include either ProMedica or St. Luke’s — the parties to the merger here.

*563 c.

The likely reason MCOs have historically found it necessary to include either ProMediea or St. Luke’s in their networks is that those providers are dominant in southwest Lucas County, where St. Luke’s is located. In that part of the county— relatively affluent, and with a high proportion of privately insured patients— ProMediea and St. Luke’s were direct competitors before the merger at issue here. Indeed, St. Luke’s viewed ProMedi-ea as its “most significant competitor,” while ProMediea viewed St. Luke’s as a “[sjtrong competitor” — strong enough, in fact, that ProMediea offered to discount its rates by 2.5%. for MCOs who excluded St. Luke’s from their networks. But in this competition ProMediea had the upper hand. It is harder for an MCO to exclude the county’s most dominant hospital system than it is for the MCO to exclude a single hospital that services just one corner of the county — a corner, moreover, that the dominant system also services. And that means the MCOs’ walk-away point for the dominant system is higher— perhaps much higher — than it is for the single hospital. Here, the record bears out that conclusion: ProMediea’s rates before the merger were among the highest in the State, while St. Luke’s rates did not even cover its cost of patient care. That was true even though St. Luke’s quality ratings on the whole were better than ProMedica’s.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
749 F.3d 559, 2014 WL 1584835, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 7500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/promedica-health-system-inc-v-federal-trade-commission-ca6-2014.