Case #1476.0

A Public Hospital's Strategy for Survival: The Story of Cambridge Hospital

Publication Date: November 01, 1998
$3.95
Current Stock:

Educator Access

A review copy of this case is available free of charge to educators and trainers. Please create an account or sign in to gain access to this material.

Permission to Reprint

Each purchase of this product entitles the buyer to one digital file and use. If you intend to distribute, teach, or share this item, you must purchase permission for each individual who will be given access. Learn more about purchasing permission to reprint.

Abstract:
When a one-time public, charity hospital faces budget deficits and a municipality unwilling to bail it out, it must find a new role for itself in the contemporary U.S. health care system. Cambridge Hospital, long-known as Cambridge City Hospital, must decide whether it should remain public, what sort of role to play if it does remain publicly-owned and operated, and what sort of relationship to forge with the Boston-area's large private hospitals.

Learning Objective:
The case describes what appears to be, at least in the short term, the hospital's successful strategic approach but, at the same time, raises a series of questions: Is there a continuing role for public institutions in the health care delivery system? Should they receive special consideration from state and federal funding programs? In addition to strategic management and public vs. private issues, the case provides a primer on the recent evolution of the U.S. health care system and the structure of its public funding programs.

Other Details

Case Author:
Esther Scott
Faculty Lead:
Robert A. Dorwart
Pages (incl. exhibits):
21
Setting:
United States
Language:
English
Funding Source:
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation