Why RI’s Healthcare Will Be In Chaos for Years

GoLocalProv Business Team

Why RI’s Healthcare Will Be In Chaos for Years

Wednesday was just another day in Rhode Island’s chaotic healthcare system — an industry that is seeing contraction and the invasion of out-of-state conglomerates.

The biggest threat to the independence of Rhode Island’s healthcare industry — one of the state’s largest and highest paying — is the emergence of Partners Healthcare into the market and its recent announcement that Partners has now started merger talks with Harvard Pilgrim, the healthcare insurer.

See Slideshow Below - Why Rhode Island’s Healthcare Will Be in Chaos for Years

Partners claims to now be in a “definitive agreement” with Care New England (CNE). Partners’ acquisition of Rhode Island’s second-largest hospital group is sure to result in even greater job loss. The financially distressed CNE has in the past three years has lost over $120 million, laid-off approximately 2,000 workers, and closed one hospital.

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Partners has been in negotiations to acquire CNE since April of 2017.

And, Partners has yet to publicly disclose any of the terms of the deal nor have they filed any documents with the regulatory state agencies -- the Rhode Island Department of Health and the Attorney General's office.

It was just four months ago that Brown President Christina Paxson raised flags about the Partners and CNE merger. In a letter to the Brown Community, she wrote in January, that in the coming months, the State of Rhode Island will face the important decision of whether to permit Partners to acquire CNE. 

"I feel strongly that letting this acquisition go forward would be wrong for Rhode Island and for Brown. Doing so is likely to lead to specialty healthcare shifting to Massachusetts, impeding access to healthcare for Rhode Islanders and especially for members of the state’s underserved communities. It also would likely increase the cost of care and reduce the ability of Rhode Islanders — consumers, businesses, healthcare workers and policy-makers — to have a voice in how our healthcare system works."

She added, "If the focal point of Rhode Island healthcare shifts to Boston, excellent physicians (many of them Brown-trained) could be less likely to choose Rhode Island as a place to practice. In addition, the full economic benefits of a strong local academic health system — one that brings in federal grants, generates spin-off companies and creates new jobs in Rhode Island— would be lost, perhaps forever."

By Wednesday of this week, she had a new position and announced that Brown was beginning to negotiate with Partners on a better deal for the University.

See Slideshow Below - Why Rhode Island’s Healthcare Will Be in Chaos for Years


Why RI’s Healthcare Will Be In Chaos for Years

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