Death rates rose in hospital ERs after private equity firms took over, study finds
Source: NBC News
Sept. 24, 2025, 5:00 AM EDT
After hospitals were acquired by private equity firms, patient death rates in the emergency departments rose by 13% compared with similar hospitals, according to research published this week in Annals of Internal Medicine. The research, which compared outcomes at hospitals over a 10-year period, adds fresh evidence to previous studies showing harmful patient outcomes and higher costs among health care entities owned by profit-oriented financiers.
The increased deaths in emergency departments at private equity-owned hospitals are most likely the result of reduced staffing levels after the acquisitions, which the study also measured, said Dr. Zirui Song, a co-author and associate professor of health care policy and medicine at Harvard Medical School.
After hospitals were acquired by private equity, the number of full-time employees fell by an average 11.6% compared with non-private equity facilities, the research found, and salary expenditures in the emergency departments and intensive care units declined by 18% and 16%, respectively.
Most hospital care in the country remains a face-to-face, human, labor-intensive endeavor, especially in emergency departments and ICUs, Song said in an interview. When human labor is cut to this extent in staffing sensitive areas of the hospital, patient harm can plausibly ensue, including mortality.
Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/death-rates-rose-hospital-ers-private-equity-firms-took-study-finds-rcna233211
Link to Annals of Internal Medicine published REPORT - Hospital Staffing and Patient Outcomes After Private Equity Acquisition

ck4829
(37,105 posts)BaronChocula
(3,381 posts)The sad part is that we live among enough people who think that's okay in the name of capitalism. It's like livin' in a cuckoo clock.
sakabatou
(45,340 posts)Scalded Nun
(1,514 posts)Initech
(106,415 posts)
IronLionZion
(49,971 posts)profit over patients. It's great for their investors.
FakeNoose
(38,767 posts)I don't know the details on this but my guess is that the private equity managers are cutting back labor costs wherever they can. They give more hours to nurses, interns and orderlies who are paid substantially less than the experienced doctors.
IronLionZion
(49,971 posts)After hospitals were acquired by private equity, the number of full-time employees fell by an average 11.6% compared with non-private equity facilities, the research found, and salary expenditures in the emergency departments and intensive care units declined by 18% and 16%, respectively.
Stargazer99
(3,321 posts)ultralite001
(2,076 posts)Particularly dead folk w/ no living relatives...Run up the charges... No one disputes
whether or not there was medical necessity or whether or not procedures were done
or meds were actually dispensed or care was given... The patient passes... How sad...
On to the next... American "health care" has become another racket...
Solly Mack
(95,777 posts)When the bottom line is profits over people, people always lose.
Can't pretend that isn't intentional.
Buddyzbuddy
(1,564 posts)are more hazardous to my health than taking a f.cking Tylenol.
Once again, this Administration is on the wrong side.
electric_blue68
(24,035 posts)hunter
(39,973 posts)... who are seeing people die simply because there are not enough hands on deck.
These people may have experienced that in war, natural disasters, pandemics, etc,, but as an everyday occurrence that kind of stress will burn anyone out.