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Private equity cuts vital eye surgeries for profit

Private equity firms are increasingly prioritizing profits over patient care in ophthalmology practices they acquire. These firms are directing clinicians to reduce or eliminate unprofitable but emergent procedures, such as emergency surgery for retinal detachment, which often results in a financial loss for the practice. Consequently, private equity-owned retinal practices perform approximately 20% fewer of these critical surgeries compared to other practices, potentially endangering patient vision. AI

Summary written by gemini-2.5-flash-lite from 2 sources. How we write summaries →

IMPACT This situation highlights how financial incentives can override medical necessity, potentially impacting healthcare access and outcomes, and may necessitate policy interventions.

RANK_REASON The cluster discusses a significant trend of private equity firms influencing medical practice operations to the detriment of patient care, impacting a specific medical procedure and raising policy concerns. [lever_c_demoted from significant: ic=2 ai=0.1]

Read on Forbes — Innovation →

Private equity cuts vital eye surgeries for profit

COVERAGE [2]

  1. Forbes — Innovation TIER_1 · Peter Ubel, Contributor ·

    Some Private Equity Firms Would Rather Let People Go Blind Than Reduce Their Profits

    Eye doctors do fewer emergency surgeries after private equity takes over

  2. Forbes — Innovation TIER_1 · Peter Ubel, Contributor ·

    Private Equity-Owned Retinal Practices Perform Fewer Retinal Detachment Procedures

    Eye doctors do fewer emergency surgeries after private equity takes over