Health Care Antitrust Course Number: Law 304 Hours: 3 Course Type: Upper-Level Writing Requirement: Rigorous Writing Experience (RWE) Skills Requirement?: No Final Exam?: No Description: This course will explore the issues of law and public policy in applying federal antitrust law to the health care industry. The purpose of antitrust law is to protect competition as the way to enhance consumer welfare. However, with regard to the health care industry, there is a significant dispute as to whether market competition promotes or inhibits the welfare of consumers. In addition, health care providers and payers operate under a complex mixture of market competition and government regulation, which significantly affects the application of federal antitrust law in this context. Specific topics will include whether Congress should extend the antitrust immunity for collective bargaining to joint negotiation by physicians with health plans; whether state governments should replace market competition in health care services with state regulation under the state action immunity; how federal courts should apply the limited antitrust immunity for peer review activities; and how courts and enforcement agencies should analyze health care markets for purposes of horizontal and vertical mergers. Related Courses: None Prerequisites: Mandatory: None Recommended: It is recommended that students have some familiarity with the health care system. This familiarity could come from taking a course in health care or health care law (either previously or concurrently), or it could result from work or personal experience. For this course, it is not necessary to have any knowledge of antitrust law.