  
	
  
The Dynamics of Market Level Change
April 1997 
Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, vol.22, no.2 (April 1997): 363-382 
 Paul B. Ginsburg 
   
 ealth care exhibits a competitive dynamic today that increasingly
    resembles that in other service industries. Organizations are becoming larger to achieve
    scale economies and to increase market power. Vertical integration, whether through
    ownership or complex contracts, is also being pursued both to seek efficiencies and to
    improve the bargaining position of the organization. External forces that are driving
    these changes include more aggressive activities on the part of purchasers to contain
    their costs, developments in information technology, management innovation in other
    service industries, and advances in medical technology. Within the heath care industry,
    there is a pattern of organizations taking the initiative to respond to these external
    forcessoften in anticipation of themand other organizations then responding to
    the pressures in turn placed on them. Although information on strategies is communicated
    rapidly throughout the country, what is attempted and what succeeds differs a great deal
    across communities. The nature of current health care institutions in the community,
    including the presence of large entities with extensive capital and strong management in a
    particular segment of the health system and the communitys experience with managed
    care are important factors in the path that change takes. 
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