Legal experts say the speed and decisiveness of the Department of Justice’s proposed antitrust settlement with OhioHealth should put other hospitals on notice.
The DOJ and Ohio attorney general’s proposed settlement announced Wednesday would require nonprofit OhioHealth to quit using certain contracting practices that the agencies say prevented health insurers from selling cheaper policies. The deal, which comes just four months after the agencies sued the Columbus-based system, will likely push other health systems to examine their own contracting practices.
“I would expect lawyers will get pretty busy looking at contracts with payers,” said Katie Keith, the director of Georgetown University’s Center for Health Policy and the Law.
Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…
Top: 44757Down: 214
STAT+: DOJ’s swift win in OhioHealth case should have hospitals studying their contracts, experts say
Comments | Time: 2026-06-18 16:01:50
Related Articles
- Fighting on Two Fronts: Ukraine’s High-Stakes War Against Wartime Corruption
- An inside look at President Trump's campaign to acquire Greenland
- The Extravaganza Will Not Be Televised
- Pour éviter la démence, il suffit peut-être de se vacciner contre le zona
- AI Isn’t Ignoring Airlines. It Just Can’t Read Their Fares.
- Top House Democrats demand immediate Rubio briefing on U.S.-Iran deal
- Middle East: Trump could restart Iran war if deal not signed
- Jim VandeHei: Writing with AI
- Google confirms: These Nest smart speakers have ended production
- Senators Threaten to Freeze Pete Hegseth’s Travel Budget Over School Bombing Documents





Comments