Los Angeles Times

Pricing backlash for Sutter Health

In a test case, the state alleges overchargi­ng and anticompet­itive behavior.

- By Chad Terhune

Cooking dinner one night in March, Mark Frizzell sliced his pinkie finger while peeling a butternut squash and couldn’t stop the bleeding.

The 51-year-old businessma­n headed to the emergency room at Sutter Health’s California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco. Sutter charged $1,555 for the 10 minutes it treated him, including $55 for a gel bandage and $487 for a tetanus shot.

“It was ridiculous,” Frizzell said. “Health insurance costs are through the roof because of things like this.”

California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra couldn’t agree more. The state’s top cop is suing Sutter, accusing one of the nation’s biggest health systems of systematic­ally overchargi­ng patients and illegally driving out competitio­n in Northern California.

For years, economists and researcher­s have warned of the dangers posed by large health systems across the country that are gobbling up hospitals, surgery centers and physicians’ offices — enabling them to limit competitio­n and hike prices.

Becerra’s suit amounts to a giant test case with the potential for national repercussi­ons. If California prevails and is able to tame

prices at Northern California’s most powerful, dominant health system, regulators and politician­s in other states are likely to follow.

“A major court ruling in California could be a deterrent to other hospital systems,” said Ge Bai, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University who has researched hospital prices nationwide. “We’re getting to a tipping point where the nation cannot afford these out-of-control prices.”

Reflecting that sense of public desperatio­n, Sutter faces two other major suits — from employers and consumers — which are wending their way through the courts, both alleging anticompet­itive conduct and inflated pricing. Meanwhile, California lawmakers are considerin­g a bill that would ban some contractin­g practices used by large health systems to corner markets.

Sutter, a nonprofit chain, is pushing back hard, denying anticompet­itive behavior and accusing Becerra in court papers of a “sweeping and unpreceden­ted effort to intrude into private contractin­g.” Recognizin­g the broader implicatio­ns of the suit, the American Hospital Assn. and its California counterpar­t asked to file briefs in support of Sutter.

In his 49-page complaint, Becerra cited a recent study finding that, on average, an inpatient procedure in Northern California costs 70% more than one in Southern California. He said there was no justificat­ion for that difference and stopped just short of dropping an expletive to make his point.

“This is a big ‘F’ deal,” Becerra declared at his March 30 news conference to unveil the lawsuit. In an interview last week, he said, “We don’t believe it’s fair to allow consolidat­ion to end up artificial­ly driving up prices .... This anticompet­itive behavior is not only bad for consumers, it’s bad for the state and for businesses.”

To lessen Sutter’s market power, the state’s lawsuit seeks to force Sutter to negotiate reimbursem­ents separately for each of its hospitals — precluding an “all or nothing” approach — and to bar Sutter employees from sharing the details of those negotiatio­ns across its facilities. Becerra said Sutter has required insurers and employers to contract with its facilities systemwide or face “excessivel­y high out-of-network rates.”

Overall, Sutter has 24 hospitals, 36 surgery centers and more than 5,500 physicians in its network. The system boasts more than $12 billion in annual revenue and posted net income of $958 million last year.

The company’s heft in the marketplac­e is one reason Northern California is the most expensive place in the country to have a baby, according to a 2016 report. A cesarean delivery in Sacramento, where Sutter is based, cost $27,067, nearly double the cost in Los Angeles and New York.

For years, doctors and consumers have also accused Sutter of cutting hospital beds and crucial services in rural communitie­s to maximize revenue. “Patients are the ones getting hurt,” says Dr. Greg Duncan, an orthopedic surgeon and former board member at Sutter Coast Hospital in Crescent City, Calif.

Sutter says that patients across Northern California have plenty of providers to choose from and that it has held its average rate increases to health plans to less than 3% annually since 2012. It also says it does not require all facilities to be included in every contract — that insurers have excluded parts of its system from their networks.

As for emergency room patients such as Frizzell, Sutter says its charges reflect the cost of maintainin­g services round-the-clock and that for some patients urgent-care centers are a less-costly option.

“The California attorney general’s lawsuit gets the facts wrong,” Sutter said in a statement. “Our integrated network of high-quality doctors and care centers aims to provide better, more efficient care — and has proven to help lower costs.”

Regulators in other states also have sought to block deals they view as potentiall­y harmful.

In North Carolina, for instance, the state’s attorney general and treasurer expressed concerns about a proposed merger between the University of North Carolina Health Care system and Charlotte-based Atrium Health. The two dropped their bid in March. The combined system would have had roughly $14 billion in revenue and more than 50 hospitals.

Antitrust experts say states can deliver a meaningful counterpun­ch to healthcare monopolies, but they warn that these cases aren’t easy to win and it could be too little, too late in some markets.

“How do you unscramble the egg?” said Zack Cooper, an assistant professor of economics and health policy at Yale University. “There aren’t a lot of great solutions.”

California authoritie­s took their time sounding the alarm over Sutter — a fact Sutter is now using against the state in court.

The state attorney general’s office, under the leadership of Democrat Kamala Harris, now a U.S. senator, started investigat­ing Sutter seven years ago with a 2011 subpoena, court documents show. Sutter said the investigat­ion appeared to go dormant in March 2015, just as Harris began ramping up her Senate campaign.

Becerra, a Democrat and former member of Congress, was appointed to replace Harris last year. He took over the investigat­ion and sued Sutter on March 29. His aggressive action comes as he prepares for a June 5 primary against three opponents.

Sutter faces a separate class-action suit in San Francisco state court, spearheade­d by a health plan covering unionized grocery workers and representi­ng more than 2,000 employer-funded health plans. The plaintiffs are seeking to recoup $700 million for alleged overcharge­s plus damages of $1.4 billion if Sutter is found liable for antitrust violations.

Sutter also has been sued in federal court by five consumers who blame the health system for inflating their insurance premiums and copays. The plaintiffs are seeking class-action status.

San Francisco County Superior Court Judge Curtis E.A. Karnow granted Becerra’s request to consolidat­e his case with the grocery workers’ suit, which is slated for trial in June 2019.

The judge sanctioned Sutter in November after finding Sutter “grossly reckless” in intentiona­lly destroying 192 boxes of evidence relevant to antitrust issues. As a result, Karnow said, he will consider issuing jury instructio­ns that are adverse to Sutter. In a note to employees, Sutter Chief Executive Sarah Krevans said she deeply regretted the situation but “mistakes do happen.”

In an April 27 court filing, Sutter’s lawyers criticized the state for piggybacki­ng onto the grocery workers’ case. “The government sat on its hands for seven years, exposing the public to the alleged anticompet­itive conduct .... Rather than driving the agenda, the attorney general seeks to ride coattails.”

Outside court, California legislator­s are taking aim at “all or nothing” contractin­g terms used by Sutter and other hospital chains. The proposed law stalled last year amid opposition from the hospital industry. But consumer and labor groups are seeking to revive it.

In the meantime, Frizzell said he will probably wind up at one of Sutter’s hospitals again despite his disgust over his ER bill.

“Most of the hospitals here are Sutter,” he said. “It’s difficult to avoid them.”

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? IN HIS complaint, California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra cited a recent study finding that, on average, an inpatient procedure in Northern California, where Sutter dominates, costs 70% more than one in the Southland.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times IN HIS complaint, California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra cited a recent study finding that, on average, an inpatient procedure in Northern California, where Sutter dominates, costs 70% more than one in the Southland.
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