UNC BOG Unsure if Hospital Deal will Help N.C. | Eastern NC Now

University of North Carolina leaders aren't sure whether a partnership between UNC Health Care and Carolinas HealthCare System would help - or hurt - North Carolinians, UNC President Margaret Spellings said Friday

ENCNow
    Publisher's note: The author of this post is Kari Travis, who is an associate editor for the Carolina Journal, John Hood Publisher.

    CHAPEL HILL     University of North Carolina leaders aren't sure whether a partnership between UNC Health Care and Carolinas HealthCare System would help - or hurt - North Carolinians, UNC President Margaret Spellings said Friday.

    The plan, introduced in August, would join the two nonprofit systems, making it one of the largest in the nation. UNC Health Care says the partnership would cut costs and increase access to better care. Critics are calling foul.

    A joint operating company could drive costs up by stifling competition and forcing insurers to increase payouts, some economists and antitrust law experts say.

    Dr. Patrick Conway, president and CEO of BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina, came out against the partnership in a public letter Wednesday.

    "Blue Cross NC has a responsibility to our customers to help slow rising health costs. After a thorough review of independent research which shows that when health care systems combine costs for consumers go up, Blue Cross NC cannot support your proposed combination," says the letter to Gene Woods of Carolinas HealthCare and Dr. Bill Roper of UNC Health Care.

    The UNC Board of Governors understands UNC Health Care's role is service to the people of North Carolina, Spellings told Carolina Journal. The jury is out on whether the merger is good for consumers.

    "The short answer today is, we don't know yet," Spellings told CJ after a UNC board meeting during which members discussed the issue. "There is lots to process here. These are competitive markets."

    Health care costs are facing "a tremendous amount of downwards pressure across the country," board Chair Lou Bissette said.

    Partnerships and mergers are trending among providers, Spellings said. UNC's leadership will study the issue thoroughly before deciding.

    "This is a board that is asking all the right questions and understands fully the mission of the university," Spellings said.

    The full board has not discussed partnership terms and is not ready to make a decision, Bissette said.

    UNC and Carolinas HealthCare are publicly owned and control about $14 billion in annual operating revenue. Together, the systems govern 50 hospitals and hire more than 90,000 employees.

    Click here to read more of our coverage.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Bissette, Board of Governors Spar Over 'Political' Op-Ed Carolina Journal, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics SOROS THREATENS: Trump 'Will Disappear in 2020 or Even Sooner'


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

If you are covering Roy Cooper in Greensboro today, please consider the following statement from the Republican National Committee:

HbAD1

Obama and Biden judges abuse power for political reasons to try to stop Haitian deportations
teachers union rally held on major socialist / communist May Day holiday
Democrats foment climate of violence against Trump and GOP
Cheryl Hines. Dennis Quaid. Nicki Minaj. All became associated with the Trump administration. What happened next?
A federal grand jury in North Carolina has indicted former FBI Director James Comey on two charges related to making threats against President Donald Trump.
Their goal was simple: to put a Planned Parenthood in every mailbox in America.

HbAD2

 
 
Back to Top