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Sutter Health will pay $575 million and adopt pricing changes to settle antitrust case

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Sutter Health will pay $575 million to settle a closely watched antitrust case filed by California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, whose office had accused the nonprofit healthcare giant of using its market dominance in Northern California to illegally drive up prices.

Under terms of the agreement, Sutter will continue to operate as an integrated system. But it has agreed to end a host of practices that Becerra alleged unfairly stifled competition, including all-or-nothing contracting deals demanding that an insurer that wanted to include any one of the Sutter hospitals or clinics in its network must include all of them — even if some of those facilities were more expensive than a competitor’s.

The agreement includes the appointment of a jointly approved special monitor who will be charged with ensuring that Sutter is following the terms of the agreement for at least the next 10 years.

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Becerra announced details of the settlement, which he termed “historic,” at a news conference Friday in Sacramento.

“When one healthcare provider can dominate the market, those who shoulder the cost of care — patients, employers, insurers — are the biggest losers,” Becerra said. “Today’s settlement will be a game-changer for restoring competition in our healthcare markets.”

The terms of the agreement are subject to approval by San Francisco Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo, who is expected to deliver a preliminary ruling on the agreement in February. Among other terms, the settlement requires Sutter to:

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  • Limit what it charges patients for out-of-network services.
  • Increase transparency by allowing insurers and employers to give patients pricing information.
  • Cease bundling services and products, and instead offer standalone pricing.

Healthcare costs in Northern California, where Sutter is dominant, are 20% to 30% higher than in Southern California, even after adjusting for cost of living, according to a 2018 study from the Nicholas C. Petris Center at UC Berkeley that was cited in the complaint.

A class-action lawsuit against Sutter is set to open this month in San Francisco Superior Court. The hospital giant stands accused of violating California’s antitrust laws by leveraging its market power to drive out competition and overcharge patients.

Sutter has 24 hospitals, 34 surgery centers and 5,500 physicians across Northern California, with $13 billion in operating revenue in 2018. The state’s lawsuit alleged Sutter has aggressively bought up hospitals and physician practices throughout the Bay Area and elsewhere in Northern California and exploited that market dominance for profit.

Sutter Health consistently denied the allegations, saying its large, integrated health system offers tangible benefits for patients, including more seamless, high-quality care and increased access for residents in rural areas. Sutter also disputed that its prices are higher than other major healthcare providers, saying its internal analyses tell a different story.

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The settlement is expected to have nationwide implications for how hospital systems negotiate prices with insurers. Though a settlement does not set a legal precedent, “it is strong guidance that the kinds of behavior Sutter engaged in are not going to be allowed going forward,” said Jaime King, associate dean and professor at UC Hastings College of the Law. “This really opens the door for attorneys general in other states to begin examining their own health systems for similar behaviors.”

The case was a massive undertaking, encompassing years of work and millions of pages of documents. Had the plaintiffs prevailed in court, Sutter might have faced damages of up to $2.7 billion.

In agreeing to the terms, Sutter did not admit wrongdoing. In a statement, General Counsel Flo Di Benedetto described Sutter’s care as “affordable” and “high-quality.” She also noted that Sutter had invested nearly $10 billion in new technologies and state-of-the-art facilities over the last decade.

“As an organization, we will have to evaluate future capital investments based on the impact of the settlement,” Di Benedetto said. “Despite the increasing cost of care and operating in high-wage markets, we remain focused on making healthcare more affordable for our patients.”

The case initially was filed as a class-action lawsuit in 2014 by the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union & Employers Benefit Trust, or UEBT, representing multiple employers, unions and local governments whose workers use Sutter services. Becerra’s office joined the case in 2018.

“Our settlement with Sutter represents an extraordinary result for working people, their employers, and every Californian who has struggled with the high cost of healthcare,” UEBT Chair Jacques Loveall said in a statement. “From the outset, our goal has been to not only achieve justice for the members of the class, but to also put an end to the anticompetitive behavior that has allowed Sutter to charge inflated prices.”

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The $575 million in damages will be distributed among the self-funded employers and union trusts that brought the case, to defray overcharges they argued they paid Sutter for worker healthcare. A portion also will go to lawyer fees. Becerra indicated that any savings for consumers will play out in the long term as insurers are able to negotiate lower prices.

Glenn Melnick, a healthcare economist at USC, said premiums are likely to drop in Northern California, though perhaps not significantly.

“It’s the first volley, the first winning point in restoring some competition to the market,” Melnick said. “Everyone is focused on the insurance companies as the bad guys, but the reason premiums are going up is because the amount they have to pay hospitals every year increases.”

In a statement, the American Hospital Assn. criticized the agreement, saying it would increase the cost of healthcare by benefiting insurers to the detriment of patients in rural and vulnerable communities.

“Unfortunately, it will be several dominant commercial health insurance companies — not consumers — that will benefit from terms that will allow those insurers to cherry-pick the hospitals with which they contract, as well as eliminate incentives for them to work with hospitals to develop and sustain value-based care,” said AHA General Counsel Melinda Hatton.

Jenny Gold writes for Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent publication of the Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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