North Carolina's Mission Health to State: Lift Competition Regulations

Mission Health, based in Asheville, N.C., recently asked state officials on the House Select Committee on the Certificate of Need Process and Related Hospital Issues to release it from regulations that restrict its ability to compete in the area, according to a Citizen-Times report.

For the past 16 years, Mission has been under the state-monitored Certificate of Public Advantage, or COPA. The COPA, which aimed to keep hospital prices low and maintain hospital quality for consumers, has regulated the health system's profit margin and limited the health system from significantly increasing its market power in the area, according to the report.

Mission President and CEO Ron Paulus told the committee it has complied with all facets of the COPA, and releasing the health system from the regulations will allow it to compete with other hospital systems in the area, such as Charlotte, N.C.-based Carolinas HealthCare and Winter Park, Fla.-based Adventist Health System. Critics argued that Mission still holds a large portion of the market share, and the regulations should remain in place, according to the report.

The committee plans to issue a report to the state's General Assembly next year.

Related Articles on North Carolina Hospitals:

Carolinas HealthCare, Novant File Applications to Add Beds in Mecklenburg Country
Presbyterian Orthopaedic Hospital in North Carolina Plans $84M Replacement Hospital
N.C.'s Person Memorial Hospital Officially Part of Duke LifePoint Healthcare

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