Health care is supposed to be about people at their most vulnerable moments. It is where trust matters more than margins and where decisions can mean the difference between healing and harm. That is why the growing role of private equity in health care should concern every patient, clinician, and policymaker paying attention.
Private equity firms are not inherently evil. They are doing what they are designed to do: maximize returns for investors, often within a short time horizon. The problem arises when that business model is dropped into a system that exists to care for human lives. Patient care and profit extraction are fundamentally incongruous goals, and when they collide, patients tend to lose.
This is not a theoretical concern. It is already happening.
Chicago Medical Malpractice Lawyers Blog





