Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Top Stories

Health care winners and losers after FTC bans noncompete clauses

Nurse and patient

Young clinicians and patients are likely to benefit from the FTC's new rule banning noncompete clauses.

Nansan Houn/Getty Images

Pearl, the author of “ ChatGPT, MD,” teaches at both the Stanford University School of Medicine and the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He is a former CEO of The Permanente Medical Group.

With a single ruling, the Federal Trade Commission removed the nation’s occupational handcuffs, freeing almost all U.S. workers from noncompete clauses that prevent them from taking positions with competitors for varying periods of time after leaving a job.

American medicine, especially, will benefit. The FTC projects the new rule will boost medical wages, foster greater competition, stimulate job creation and reduce health expenditures by $74 billion to $194 billion over the next decade. This comes at a crucial time for American health care, an industry where half of physicians report burnout and 100 million people (41 percent of U.S. adults) are saddled with medical bills they cannot afford.


The FTC’s final rule, issued in April, liberates not only new hires but also the 30 million Americans currently tethered to noncompete agreements. Scheduled to take effect in September — subject to legal challenges by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business groups — the ruling will allow health care professionals to change jobs within the community rather than having to move 10, 20 or even 50 miles away to avoid breaching a noncompete clause.

Like all major rulings, this one creates clear winners and losers — outcomes that will reshape careers and potentially alter the very structure of U.S. health care.

Winners: Newly trained clinicians

Undoubtedly, the FTC’s ruling is a win for younger doctors and nurses, many of whom enter the medical job market in their late 20s and early 30s, carrying significant student-loan debt — nearly $200,000 for the average doctor.

Eager for a stable, well-paying position, young professionals join hospitals and health systems with the promise of future salary increases and more autonomy. But when these promises fail to materialize, noncompete clauses give clinicians little choice but to uproot their lives, move far away and start over. As one physician in rural Appalachia told the FTC, “Healthcare providers feel trapped in their current employment situation, leading to significant burnout that can shorten their career longevity.”

By banning noncompetes, the FTC’s rule will boost career mobility, spurring competition among health care employers to attract and, more importantly, retain top talent.

Currently, the rule comes with one notable asterisk: Nonprofit hospitals and health systems fall outside the FTC’s jurisdiction. However, the agency says these facilities might be at “a self-inflicted disadvantage in their ability to recruit workers.” Moreover, as Congress intensifies scrutiny on the nonprofit status of U.S. hospitals, those that reject the FTC’s guidelines may find themselves forced to comply through legislative actions.

Winners: Patients in competitive health care markets

The FTC’s ban on noncompete clauses will directly improve patient outcomes. For example, doctors and nurses who experience less burnout and greater job satisfaction are far less likely to make serious medical errors, studies show.

Further, clinicians who are now free to practice elsewhere in the community are likely to offer greater access, lower prices and more personalized service to attract and retain patients. Other doctors and nurses will join local outpatient centers, offering convenient and cost-effective alternatives to the high-priced diagnostic tests, surgeries and urgent care provided at nearby hospitals.

Losers: Large health systems

Made up of several hospitals in a geographic area, large health systems have traditionally relied on noncompete agreements to build market dominance. By preventing high-demand medical professionals such as radiologists and anesthesiologists from joining with competitors or starting independent practices, these health systems have managed to suppress competition while forcing insurers to pay more for services.

Currently, these systems demand high reimbursement rates from government and business payers. At the same time, they maintain relatively low wages for staff, creating a highly profitable model. Yale economist Zack Cooper’s research shows the consequence of the status quo: In highly concentrated hospital markets, prices go up and quality declines.

The FTC’s ruling will challenge those conditions, eroding health-system monopolies and shrinking their oversized bottom lines.

Losers: Hospital administrators

Individual hospitals have faced a unique challenge this past decade. Inpatient numbers continue falling nationwide, which makes it harder for hospital administrators to fill beds. This trend — driven by new technologies, evidence-based practices and changing insurance-reimbursement policies — have forced hospital administrators to adapt their financial strategies.

And adapt they did. Today, outpatient services account for half of all hospital revenue, reflecting aggressive acquisitions of local practices that offer physician consultations, procedures like radiological and cardiac diagnostics, chemotherapy, and same-day surgery.

Medicare and other insurers pay hospital-owned outpatient services more than local doctors and other facilities for identical services. By acquiring community outpatient practices, hospitals are paid higher rates without facing higher costs, thus generating large profits.

This strategy only works, however, if hospital administrators can prevent clinicians from quitting and returning to practice in the same community. If they do, their patients are likely to follow.

This is why the noncompete clauses are so essential to a hospital’s financial success. As expected, the American Hospital Association opposes the FTC’s rule, calling it “bad law, bad policy, and a clear sign of an agency run amok.”

Looking ahead

Today’s hospital systems are divided between haves and have-nots. Facilities in affluent areas enjoy higher reimbursements from private insurers, with greater financial success and higher administrator salaries (but not necessarily better patient outcomes). Rural hospitals grapple with low patient volumes while facilities in economically disadvantaged, high-population areas face greater financial difficulties.

None of these models are working for everyday Americans. The ultimate measure of health care policy should be its effect on patients. Based on the FTC ruling, the evidence is clear: Eliminating noncompete clauses will benefit patients greatly.

Read More

Marines Sent to Los Angeles “Presents a Significant Logistical and Operational Challenge”

Protesters confront National Guard soldiers and police outside of a federal building as protests continue in Los Angeles following three days of clashes with police after a series of immigration raids on June 09, 2025, in Los Angeles, California.

(Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Marines Sent to Los Angeles “Presents a Significant Logistical and Operational Challenge”

LOS ANGELES, CA - An estimated 700 U.S. Marines are being mobilized from the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, approximately 140 miles east of Los Angeles, to Camp Pendleton in San Diego County. This mobilization will position the troops closer to Los Angeles, where they may potentially work alongside National Guard units to protect federal resources and personnel, according to NBC News.

The latest figures from police, nearly 70 individuals were arrested over the weekend during protests. This total includes 29 people arrested on Saturday for failure to disperse and 21 individuals arrested on Sunday on charges ranging from attempted murder involving a Molotov cocktail to looting and failure to disperse, as reported by the LAPD.

Keep ReadingShow less
GOP Funding Bill Could Put CA Rural Health Centers, Hospitals at Risk

Medicaid, known as Medi-Cal in California, makes up about 40% of revenue for Community Health Centers, which serve almost 32 million mostly low-income people nationwide.

Arlette/Adobe Stock

GOP Funding Bill Could Put CA Rural Health Centers, Hospitals at Risk

People who depend on Community Health Centers and rural hospitals could have trouble finding care if Medicaid cuts just approved by the U.S. House are signed into law.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated 8 million people nationwide could lose coverage over the next decade, including more than 3 million in California.

Lizette Escobedo, vice president of government relations and civic engagement at AltaMed Health Services in Los Angeles, said the costs to treat a flood of uninsured patients would overwhelm community clinics and small town hospitals.

"If this bill were to be implemented over the next 10 years, some federally qualified health centers and hospitals especially in the rural areas would probably have to close their doors," Escobedo projected.

Supporters of the bill said the savings are needed to fund other administration priorities, including President Donald Trump's 2017 tax cuts. The bill would also tighten work requirements for Medicaid coverage and force people to reapply every six months instead of annually. And it would slash tens of billions in federal funding to states like California allowing health coverage for undocumented people.

Joe Dunn, chief policy officer for the National Association of Community Health Centers, called the proposed cuts counterproductive, in terms of keeping people healthy and keeping costs down.

"Health centers actually save money in the long run, because it reduces utilization of emergency departments and other kind of higher-cost settings, like inpatient hospitalization," Dunn explained.

The bill is now in the U.S. Senate.

GOP Funding Bill Could Put CA Rural Health Centers, Hospitals at Risk was originally published by the Public News Service and is republished with permission.

Keep ReadingShow less
Selective Sympathy: America’s Racial Double Standard on South African Asylum

Unrecognizable person clinging to a fence deprived of freedom

Getty Images//Stock Photo

Selective Sympathy: America’s Racial Double Standard on South African Asylum

It's a peculiar feeling to see the United States, a nation built on the bones of the oppressed, suddenly rebrand itself as a sanctuary for the persecuted as long as those seeking refuge are white. The current executive branch of the American government has managed to weaponize the language of human rights for its own geopolitical and racial ends— that is, selective, self-serving, misguided, and immoral.

The Trump administration is sullying the name of America, with barely a fig leaf of evidence, by trumpeting allegations of "genocide" against white South Africans. The chorus rises from right-wing newsrooms to the halls of Congress, fueled by viral videos and the breathless retelling of farm attacks, stripped of historical context or statistical rigor. White South Africans are an endangered species, so told, and America must fling open its doors, granting not just asylum but a fast track to citizenship—no questions asked.

Keep ReadingShow less
Just the Facts: Who Holds the Cards: The United States or China in Tariff Negotiations
A golden trump head stands before stacks of money.
Photo by Igor Omilaev on Unsplash

Just the Facts: Who Holds the Cards: The United States or China in Tariff Negotiations

The Fulcrum strives to approach news stories with an open mind and skepticism, striving to present our readers with a broad spectrum of viewpoints through diligent research and critical thinking. As best we can, remove personal bias from our reporting and seek a variety of perspectives in both our news gathering and selection of opinion pieces. However, before our readers can analyze varying viewpoints, they must have the facts.

What is the current status?

Keep ReadingShow less