Tishad Abtahi, Skelly Ryan, Stinson Griffin, Horodyski MaryBeth, Toussaint Rull James
College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
JB JS Open Access. 2024 Dec 24;9(4). doi: 10.2106/JBJS.OA.24.00165. eCollection 2024 Oct-Dec.
Private equity (PE) investment in health care has increased more than 250% between 2010 and 2020. This is mirrored by an increasing number of published materials in medical journals. The objective of our study was to identify and characterize trends and key themes seen within publications discussing the topic of PE investment into orthopaedic surgery practices and bias within those publications.
The inclusion criteria for our study required an article to be published between the years 2003 and June 2024 and to contain the phrase "orthopaedic surgery" or "orthopedics" in addition to "PE" or "PE investment." Based on these parameters, 15 articles met the criteria for inclusion. Articles were then evaluated to assess various themes related to general views expressed regarding PE firms, reasons for PE attraction to orthopaedics, and most cited positives/negatives of PE investment and potential conflicts of interest with respect to underlying relationships/associations with PE firms at the time of publication.
Of the 15 publications meeting the inclusion criteria, 4 (26.7%) expressed positive views on the topic of PE ownership of orthopaedic practices, while 4 (26.7%) expressed a neutral view and 7 (46.7%) expressed a negative outlook. Four (26.7%) of the articles had authors who were either employed or had ownership in a practice that was purchased by a PE firm. Of these 4 articles, none disclosed this potential conflict of interest. Three of the 4 articles had either a positive or neutral view of PE. The most cited reason for PE attraction to orthopaedics was revenue from ancillary services. The most cited upside of PE transactions was the possibility of benefiting from economies of scale, while the most cited downside was the misalignment of incentives.
The plurality of present studies views PE transactions negatively (46.7%). Our research unveiled 4 studies with undisclosed conflicts of interest (26.7%). In addition, orthopaedic surgeons should be wary of the numerous downsides of PE transactions, such as the misaligned incentives between themselves and PE firms.
Independent orthopaedic practices should be critical of the literature when evaluating the merits of potential partnerships with PE firms.
2010年至2020年间,私募股权(PE)对医疗保健领域的投资增长超过250%。医学期刊上发表的相关材料数量也在增加。我们研究的目的是识别并描述在讨论PE对骨科手术业务投资这一主题的出版物中所呈现的趋势、关键主题以及这些出版物中的偏见。
我们研究的纳入标准要求文章发表于2003年至2024年6月之间,并且除了包含“PE”或“PE投资”外,还需包含“骨科手术”或“骨科”一词。基于这些参数,有15篇文章符合纳入标准。随后对这些文章进行评估,以评估与对PE公司的总体看法、PE对骨科感兴趣的原因、PE投资最常被提及的积极/消极方面以及在发表时与PE公司潜在的关系/关联所涉及的利益冲突等相关的各种主题。
在符合纳入标准的15篇出版物中,4篇(26.7%)对PE持有骨科业务这一主题表达了积极看法,4篇(26.7%)表达了中立看法,7篇(46.7%)表达了负面观点。4篇(26.7%)文章的作者受雇于或拥有被PE公司收购的业务。在这4篇文章中,没有一篇披露这种潜在的利益冲突。这4篇文章中有3篇对PE持积极或中立看法。PE对骨科感兴趣最常被提及的原因是来自辅助服务的收入。PE交易最常被提及的好处是有可能受益于规模经济,而最常被提及的不利之处是激励措施不一致。
目前多数研究对PE交易持负面看法(46.7%)。我们的研究发现4项研究存在未披露的利益冲突(26.7%)。此外,骨科医生应警惕PE交易的诸多不利之处,比如他们自身与PE公司之间激励措施不一致。
独立的骨科业务在评估与PE公司潜在合作的优点时,应对相关文献持批判性态度。