Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Home
  • Content
    • Current issue
    • Past issues
    • Healthy You
    • Job listings
    • Q&As
    • Special sections
  • Multimedia
    • Quiz
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
  • FAQs
    • Advertising
    • Subscriptions
    • For APHA members
    • Internships
    • Change of address
  • About
    • About The Nation's Health
    • Submissions
    • Permissions
    • Purchase articles
    • Join APHA
  • Contact us
    • Feedback
  • APHA
    • AJPH
    • NPHW

User menu

  • My alerts

Search

  • Advanced search
The Nation's Health
  • APHA
    • AJPH
    • NPHW
  • My alerts
The Nation's Health

Advanced Search

  • Home
  • Content
    • Current issue
    • Past issues
    • Healthy You
    • Job listings
    • Q&As
    • Special sections
  • Multimedia
    • Quiz
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
  • FAQs
    • Advertising
    • Subscriptions
    • For APHA members
    • Internships
    • Change of address
  • About
    • About The Nation's Health
    • Submissions
    • Permissions
    • Purchase articles
    • Join APHA
  • Contact us
    • Feedback
  • Follow The Nation's Health on Twitter
  • Follow APHA on Twitter
  • Visit APHA on Facebook
  • Follow APHA on Youtube
  • Follow APHA on Instagram
  • Follow The Nation's Health RSS feeds
NewsNation

Private equity’s hold on health care growing, raising concerns

Mark Barna
The Nation's Health June 2023, 53 (4) 9;
Mark Barna
  • Search for this author on this site
Figure

In recent years, private equity takeovers have risen sharply in over a dozen health sectors, ranging from end-of-life care and nursing homes to hospitals and medical specialties, according to a new report from Public Citizen.

Photo by Ridofranz, courtesy iStockphoto

Private equity ownership in health care has led to price gouging, reduced quality of care and quickened facility closures, according to a watchdog report released in March. And while most of private ownership involves medical facilities, public health remains impacted by the practices.

“The damage that private equity has wrought on Americans’ health care — from cradle to grave, simply for profit — has become a life or death situation. Transparency and oversight are needed, stat.”

— Eagan Kemp

In the past 15 years, private equity takeovers have risen sharply in more than a dozen health sectors, ranging from end-of-life care and nursing homes to hospitals and medical specialties, said the Public Citizen report. Acquisitions are often under the radar.

“Thanks to a lack of transparency, we don’t know everything about private equity’s incursion into health care, but what we do know is shocking and immoral,” Eagan Kemp, MS, health care policy advocate at Public Citizen and author of the report, said in a news release. “The damage that private equity has wrought on Americans’ health care — from cradle to grave, simply for profit — has become a life or death situation. Transparency and oversight are needed, stat.”

For the report, Public Citizen dug into public records, news releases, academic studies, trade journals and other sources to track private equity growth and impact. Among its findings was that between 2000 and 2018, private equity investments in health care increased by a factor of 20.

In recent years, for-profit firms have back-pedaled from financially troubled sectors such as nursing homes to those with higher rewards for investors, such as hospitals, diagnostic imaging, home health care, reproductive health, obstetrics and gastroenterology.

Acquisition of gastroenterology practices grew by nearly 30% in 2020-2021, and three of the four largest staffing companies for obstetrics at emergency departments are owned by private equity firms.

Private equity is driven by profits and satisfying shareholders, not developing health facilities into first-rate providers, the report said.

That means patient care tends to suffer after acquisition.

The report cites cases in which health care declined after private equity took over. Reviewing death records at nursing homes from 2005 to 2017, a National Bureau of Economic Research study found that morbidity increased 10% at facilities recently bought by private entities.

When the COVID-19 pandemic created an increase in demand for mental health services, private equity capitalized and bought up behavioral and mental health clinics. The move increased risk of “higher prices for patients and a focus on profit instead of patient well-being,” the report said.

Industry observers have called for greater oversight, transparency and accountability in acquisitions of health care facilities by private equity firms, which are not required to have the same transparency as nonprofits.

“The regulation needs to be on the money, the spending and the ownership,” said Charlene Harrington, PhD, RN, a professor emerita at the University of California-San Francisco, who was not involved in the report.

“There needs to be criteria for who can be an owner,” Harrington, who studies acquisitions of health care facilities, told The Nation’s Health.

For more information on the report, “Private Equity’s Path of Destruction in Health Care Continues to Spread,” visit www.citizen.org.

  • Copyright The Nation’s Health, American Public Health Association
PreviousNext
Back to top

In this issue

The Nation's Health: 53 (4)
The Nation's Health
Vol. 53, Issue 4
June 2023
  • Table of Contents
  • Table of Contents (PDF)
  • Index by author
  • Complete Issue (PDF)

Healthy You

Healthy You

Print
Article Alerts
Sign In to Email Alerts with your Email Address
Email Article
We do not capture any email addresses.
Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
Private equity’s hold on health care growing, raising concerns
(Your Name) has sent you a message from The Nation's Health
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this item on The Nation's Health website.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Citation Tools
Private equity’s hold on health care growing, raising concerns
Mark Barna
The Nation's Health June 2023, 53 (4) 9;

Citation Manager Formats

  • BibTeX
  • Bookends
  • EasyBib
  • EndNote (tagged)
  • EndNote 8 (xml)
  • Medlars
  • Mendeley
  • Papers
  • RefWorks Tagged
  • Ref Manager
  • RIS
  • Zotero
Share
Private equity’s hold on health care growing, raising concerns
Mark Barna
The Nation's Health June 2023, 53 (4) 9;
del.icio.us logo Twitter logo Facebook logo Mendeley logo
Tweet Widget Facebook Like LinkedIn logo

Jump to section

  • Top

More in this TOC Section

  • Nation in Brief
  • Vaccine skepticism within nation’s top health offices raising alarm
  • US primary care system in dire need of investment as insurance payments to providers fall
Show more Nation

Popular features

  • Healthy You
  • Special sections
  • Q&As
  • Quiz
  • Podcasts

FAQs

  • Advertising
  • Subscriptions
  • For APHA members
  • Submissions
  • Change of address

APHA

  • Join APHA
  • Annual Meeting
  • NPHW
  • AJPH
  • Get Ready
  • Contact APHA
  • Privacy policy

© 2025 The Nation's Health

Powered by HighWire