• Listen Live NOW!
  • On Demand
  • Ways to Listen
  • All Shows
    • Radio Shows
      • Digital Health Talks
      • Health Cent$
      • Health Stealth Radio
      • Health UnaBASHEd
      • Healthcare De Jure
      • Healthcare IT Today
      • News You Can Use
      • PopHealth Week
      • Talking the Walk
      • The Scope with Dr. K
      • The Tate Chronicles
      • The Virtual Shift
      • This Just In Radio Show
      • Trending NOW
      • Value-Based Care Insights
      • What’s My Tagline?
    • Podcast Shows
      • Ambulatory Healthcare Today
      • Ask the Educator
      • FINN Voices
      • Healthcare for Humans
      • Healthcare Rap
      • HealthLaw HotSpot
      • Leader to Leader
      • The MRO Exchange
      • Revenue Cycle Optimized
      • Selling to Healthcare
      • The Handoff
      • Unscripted The AMCP Podcast
    • Monthly/Limited Series Podcasts
      • Life-Centered Health Care
      • Take a Listen
      • Tell Me Where IT Hurts
      • The CereCore Podcast
      • The Dish on Health IT
      • Voices of Self Funding
  • Playlists
  • NursesNOW
    • Nursing News
      • Organizations
      • Podcasts
  • Conferences
  • Request a Media Kit
Event Calendar
HealthcareNOWradio.comHealthcareNOWradio.com
  • Listen Live NOW!
  • On Demand
  • Ways to Listen
  • All Shows
    • Radio Shows
      • Digital Health Talks
      • Health Cent$
      • Health Stealth Radio
      • Health UnaBASHEd
      • Healthcare De Jure
      • Healthcare IT Today
      • News You Can Use
      • PopHealth Week
      • Talking the Walk
      • The Scope with Dr. K
      • The Tate Chronicles
      • The Virtual Shift
      • This Just In Radio Show
      • Trending NOW
      • Value-Based Care Insights
      • What’s My Tagline?
    • Podcast Shows
      • Ambulatory Healthcare Today
      • Ask the Educator
      • FINN Voices
      • Healthcare for Humans
      • Healthcare Rap
      • HealthLaw HotSpot
      • Leader to Leader
      • The MRO Exchange
      • Revenue Cycle Optimized
      • Selling to Healthcare
      • The Handoff
      • Unscripted The AMCP Podcast
    • Monthly/Limited Series Podcasts
      • Life-Centered Health Care
      • Take a Listen
      • Tell Me Where IT Hurts
      • The CereCore Podcast
      • The Dish on Health IT
      • Voices of Self Funding
  • Playlists
  • NursesNOW
    • Nursing News
      • Organizations
      • Podcasts
  • Conferences
  • Request a Media Kit

Hospital-Based Cardiologists Are Putting More Than Just Their Hearts Into It

Jun 8, 2023 | Posted by Industry Expert | Healthcare |

By David Burda, News Editor & Columnist, 4sight Health
Twitter: @davidrburda
Twitter: @4sighthealth_

Thirty or so years ago, I experienced chest pain after doing some strenuous yard work. I was using one of those old-time, manual sod cutters to cut sod from the side of our house to make a big herb garden. You know the cutter. It’s the one with the blade that you kick with your foot until you’re exhausted.

Anyway, I drove to the ER at our local hospital to get checked out. It turned out the chest pain was not heart-related and more likely the result of muscle strain or the amount of peanut butter I had for lunch to fuel my yard work. I was back home after a few hours.

I dutifully followed the post-visit instructions from the ER doctor and saw my primary care physician the following week. I told my PCP what happened, and the first thing he said was: “I’m surprised they didn’t keep you there.” After that, each time I saw him, he sarcastically asked me if I had any more ER visits. To say he was a minimalist when it came to medical interventions would be an understatement.

I missed his point at the time, but now I get it. He was saying, in his experience as an independent physician, that it would have been more likely for the hospital-affiliated ER doctor to admit me for a battery of cardiac tests and procedures whether I needed them or not. Once the hospital grabs you, it’s hard to escape. He was saying I was one of the lucky ones and warning me not to go back unless I was holding my severed foot in my hands from trying to cut sod again.

A new study highlights the importance of hospital-physician integration and how that healthcare vertical integration market phenomenon affects the use of cardiac tests and procedures.

Using Medicare claims data from 2013 through 2020, researchers from Northeastern University and Lawrence (Mass.) General Hospital compared the frequency of three cardiac interventions ordered by independent cardiologists and by hospital-integrated cardiologists, i.e., employed by the hospital, for about 15,000 Medicare patients newly diagnosed with stable angina. That’s chest pain or discomfort brought on by exercise or stress. (Think cutting sod and returning the rented sod cutter on time.)

The three interventions were cardiac stress testing, cardiac catheterization and coronary angioplasty. Independent cardiologists treated about two-thirds of the patients, integrated cardiologists handled the rest.

Here’s how it broke down:

  • 30% of the patients treated by integrated cardiologists got stress testing compared with 32% of the patients treated by independent cardiologists.
  • 38% of the patients treated by integrated cardiologists got cardiac catheterizations compared with 33% of the patients treated by independent cardiologists.
  • 14% of the patients treated by integrated cariologists got coronary angioplasties compared with 11% of the patients treated by independent cardiologists.

“These results imply that hospital-cardiologist integration may tilt treatment mix toward higher-intensity services,” the researchers said.

“Hospitals might incentivize or otherwise encourage their physicians to steer patients toward care that supports the hospital’s financial health, such as MRIs,” the researchers said. “Our results are consistent with this explanation, although explicit incentives might not be necessary.”

In other words, employed cardiologists know who butters their bread. Nudge, nudge, wink, wink.

There’s other noteworthy stuff in the research that I won’t go into detail on, like employed cardiologists coding their patients as sicker when they’re not, the federal antitrust enforcement policy not being sensitive enough to detect anticompetitive, physician practice acquisitions and hospitals subjecting their patients to unnecessary safety risks.

Vertical integration is a strategy to control the means of production for economic gain. It’s as true in healthcare as it is in any other industry.

So, the next time you think about cutting sod to put in a garden, hire a lawn service.

To learn more about this topic, please read:

  • “Beware the Vertically Integrated Employed Physician”
  • “Adding Up the Romantic and Philosophical Benefits of Provider Affiliations”
  • “Hospital + Doctors = Higher Prices”

Thanks for reading.

This article was originally published on 4sight Health and is republished here with permission.

Tags: 4sight HealthDavid Burda

Radio for the Healthcare Industry

No HTML5 audio playback capabilities for this browser. Use Chrome Browser!

Categories

Get Our News Digest


Thank you!

You have successfully joined our subscriber list.

.

Upcoming Events

Jun 16
June 16 - June 18

AHIP 2025

Las Vegas
Jun 18
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm EDT

From Diagnosis to Defense: AI’s Role in Healthcare Security

Jun 21
June 21 - June 22

World Congress on Patient Safety & Nursing Healthcare

Hilo
View Calendar

About HealthcareNOWRadio.com

HealthcareNOWradio.com is an Internet radio station operated and produced as part of Answers Media Network. The station offers interviews, and commentary from industry leaders in healthcare and health information technology, as well as originally produced programming hosted by industry leaders. Listen on any device 24/7. You can also subscribe to get notification when a new show airs.

Sign Up for Our e-News Digest

Get notified when a new show airs or when your favorites are available as podcasts. Sign up here

Connect with Us

Request a Media Kit

Contact Us

Book a Guest

Visit Health IT Answers

©2025 Answers Media Company, LLC

  • Our Privacy Policy
  • Our Guests and Recording Policy
Prev Next