Group Purchasing Organizations: Healthcare

What is a GPO?
A Group Purchasing Organization (GPO) is an entity that helps healthcare providers (such as hospitals, including university hospital systems; ambulatory care facilities; nursing homes and home health agencies) realize savings and efficiencies by aggregating purchasing volume and using that leverage to negotiate discounts with manufacturers, distributors and other vendors.

How does a GPO “work”?
GPOs do not purchase or buy any products. They negotiate contracts that hospitals can use when making their own purchases. With input from members and clients, GPOs work to negotiate contracts with healthcare manufacturers, distributors and other suppliers. After a group purchasing contract is created, it is still up to the hospital to decide which product is most appropriate in each circumstance and make the most appropriate purchase. Most healthcare providers make purchasing selections in a committee setting, usually comprised of healthcare professionals, such as doctors, nurses and other clinicians. These committees help determine which medical supplies are most appropriate from a clinical standpoint. Hospitals and other healthcare providers remain free to make non-GPO contracted purchases and often do.

What type of healthcare entities use GPOs?
All types of healthcare organizations use group purchasing. Nearly every hospital in the U.S. (approximately 96 percent to 98 percent) chooses to utilize GPO contracts for their purchasing functions. Additionally, estimates are that hospitals across the U.S. use, on average, two to four GPOs per facility. A growing portion of the long-term care, ambulatory care, home care and physician practice markets are using group purchasing to help lower costs and improve efficiency. Further, the federal government also provides group purchasing services to various executive branch agencies.

Source: The Healthcare Supply Chain Association (HSCA, www.supplychainassociation.org) is a broad-based trade association that represents 16 group purchasing organizations, including not-for-profit and for-profit corporations, purchasing groups, associations, multi-hospital systems and healthcare provider alliances. HSCA’s mission is to advocate on behalf of healthcare group purchasing associations, to provide educational opportunities designed to improve efficiencies in the purchase, sale and utilization of all goods and services within the health industry and to promote meaningful dialogue between GPOs.

This article originally appeared in the issue of .

Featured

  • Geometric abstract school illustration

    How Design Shapes Learning and Success

    Can the color of a wall, the curve of a chair, or the hum of fluorescent lights really affect how a student learns? More schools are beginning to think so.

  • Rhode Island Boarding School Completes Student Dorm Renovations

    St. George’s School in Middletown, R.I., recently announced the completion of a $26-million renovation project on Arden-Diman-Eccles Dormitory, according to a news release. The school partnered with Voith & Mactavish Architects (VMA) on the new space, which places a new focus on collaborative community spaces open to both boarding students and day students.

  • Image courtesy of Kahler Slater

    UW–Madison Announces Completion of Morgridge Hall

    The University of Wisconsin–Madison recently announced that construction is complete on Morgridge Hall, a new academic building, according to a news release. The facility opened September 3 at the start of the fall semester, consolidating the School of Computer, Data & Information Sciences into a single facility for the first time.

  • Kimball International Releases Curated Design Support Program

    Commercial furnishings company Kimball International recently announced the launch of a new end-to-end design support program, DesignSuite. According to a news release, its goal is to guide architecture & design professionals and dealer partners through the process from vision to specification.