Organizational Characteristics and Environmental Factors Associated with Hospitals Identified as Consolidation Targets

Authors

  • Christi Pierce, DSc Christi Pierce, DSc Vice President, Quality and Safety Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center
  • Stephen O'Connor Stephen O’Connor Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Health Services Administration
  • Larry Hearld, PhD Larry Hearld, PhD Associate Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Health Services Administration
  • James D. Byrd, Jr, PhD James D. Byrd, Jr. PhD Assistant Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Accounting and Finance
  • Nancy Borkowski, DBA Nancy Borkowski, DBA Distinguished Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Health Services Administration

Abstract

In today’s dynamic health care landscape, hospitals face uncertainty and financial strain from changing reimbursement schemas, intense government regulation, technological advances, consumer demand, and workforce scarcity. These increased pressures have led to an acceleration of consolidation activities as hospitals position themselves to cope with a shifting, complex external environment by maximizing resources, creating economies of scale, and expanding access to care. Despite increased hospital consolidation activity, scholars know little about what makes a hospital attractive as a consolidation target to an acquiring organization, particularly after the Affordable Care Act.

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the organizational characteristics and environmental factors associated with hospitals identified as targets through the lens of resource dependence theory. A multivariate binary logistic regression model is used to analyze the differences between hospitals selected as consolidation targets and hospitals that were not.

Our findings were somewhat mixed; we found weak support found for one hypothesis (sociodemographic factors), partial support for two of the six hypotheses (structural characteristics, competitive factors), and no support for three of the hypotheses (operational performance, financial performance, physical factors). The results suggest that while operational performance is important to hospital success, acquiring organizations tend to be motivated by traditionally favorable organizational characteristics (i.e., ownership status) and market factors (i.e., Herfindahl-Hirschman Index).

Author Biographies

  • Christi Pierce, DSc, Christi Pierce, DSc Vice President, Quality and Safety Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center

    Christi Pierce, DSc
    Vice President, Quality and Safety
    Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center

  • Stephen O'Connor, Stephen O’Connor Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Health Services Administration

    Stephen O’Connor
    Professor
    University of Alabama at Birmingham
    Department of Health Services Administration

     

  • Larry Hearld, PhD, Larry Hearld, PhD Associate Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Health Services Administration

    Larry Hearld, PhD
    Associate Professor
    University of Alabama at Birmingham
    Department of Health Services Administration

  • James D. Byrd, Jr, PhD, James D. Byrd, Jr. PhD Assistant Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Accounting and Finance

    James D. Byrd, Jr. PhD
    Assistant Professor
    University of Alabama at Birmingham
    Department of Accounting and Finance

  • Nancy Borkowski, DBA, Nancy Borkowski, DBA Distinguished Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Health Services Administration

    Nancy Borkowski, DBA
    Distinguished Professor
    University of Alabama at Birmingham
    Department of Health Services Administration

References

Please see the article for references.

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Published

2021-04-20

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Articles