Behavioral health operators looking to cash in on their businesses must understand both sides of the M&A equation. That partly means figuring out how much their company will be worth moving forward and what goes into the valuation-setting process. It also means understanding the micro- and macro-level forces shaping the industry in the present. Generally, there has been a dip in behavioral health deal-making activity in 2023. Industry insiders forecast a lot of action in years to come, however, as the space is ripe for continued consolidation, Behavioral Health Business reports. Read more.
Related Posts
Mount Sinai to Close Beth Israel Campus in New York
Escalating losses, with a further $150 million expected this year, and chronic underutilization with inpatient use typically at only 20 percent of capacity, have forced the issue.
September 15, 2023
MGMA Report Reveals First-Ever Data on Operational Evolution to Value-Based Care for Medical Practices
The 2022 edition of MGMA DataDive Practice Operations includes data from more than 2,300 organizations across multiple specialties and practice types.
August 19, 2022
The Transformation in Behavioral Digital Health Services
Behavioral health is the highest-funded clinical indication within digital health, and digital behavioral health companies raised $1.7 billion in the first three quarters of 2022.
February 6, 2023
Reform Group Pushes to Curb PE Control of Health Care
Americans for Financial Reform Education Fund wants government officials to take action to slow what it dubs as “the increasingly harmful effects” or private equity’s control of massive swaths of the health care sector.
July 13, 2023