In the evolving landscape of American healthcare, management consulting firms have rapidly entrenched themselves as key players, exerting a level of influence that rivals, if not surpasses, their presence in other sectors of the economy. Hospitals, grappling with complex financial pressures and stringent regulatory demands, increasingly turn to these consultants for strategic guidance on cost management, operational restructuring, and revenue enhancement strategies. Despite their high profile, the real impact and efficacy of these management consultants in nonprofit hospitals have remained largely opaque — until now.
A groundbreaking empirical study, recently published in JAMA, offers the first expansive and data-driven exploration of how nonprofit hospitals engage with management consulting services and whether these engagements translate into meaningful operational or financial improvements. Conducted by researchers including Joseph Dov Bruch, PhD, from the University of Chicago, the study harnesses the power of machine learning to analyze IRS Form 990 filings over a 12-year period. These filings are a treasure trove of financial disclosure data mandated for nonprofits, revealing detailed information about large external contracts, including those with consulting firms.
This meticulous analysis identified contracts between nonprofit hospitals and management consulting firms, focusing on 306 hospitals that initiated such relationships between 2010 and 2022. To isolate the effects of hiring consultants, these hospitals were matched with peer institutions that did not contract with consultants during the same timeframe. This comparative design enabled a robust examination of differences across a suite of financial, staffing, operational, and patient outcome metrics.
The results reveal that more than 20% of nonprofit hospitals engaged management consultants over the period studied, cumulatively spending at least $7.8 billion — an average investment of around $15.7 million per hospital. While these figures signify a substantial allocation of funds that could otherwise be invested directly into clinical services or community health, the researchers found little evidence that consultant involvement yielded significant improvements. Core financial indicators such as net patient revenue, operating margins, and cash reserves remained statistically unchanged. Similarly, claims-based metrics of patient outcomes— covering readmissions and mortality rates— showed no systematic benefit attributable to consulting engagements.
Interestingly, the sole adverse association uncovered was a slight uptick in stroke readmissions, suggesting that consultant-driven changes might carry unintended consequences for some patient populations. This nuanced finding raises questions about the nature of consultant recommendations and their operational execution within complex clinical environments, underscoring the need for further investigation into how these external advisories interface with clinical care pathways.
Bruch and his colleagues caution that their current findings specifically concern management consultants, rather than the full gamut of external advisory services. When expanding the lens to include other consultant categories such as human resources and information technology, the financial commitment of nonprofit hospitals exceeds $25 billion within the same timespan. This broader figure highlights the magnitude of reliance on external expertise in nonprofit healthcare and signals a larger ecosystem of consulting expenditures that merit transparency and accountability.
The study advocates for heightened scrutiny by hospital leadership and policymakers regarding how tax-exempt institutions allocate resources toward contracted consulting services. Given the potential trade-offs between consulting costs and direct patient care investment, stakeholders must critically evaluate the return on investment these contracts deliver. The absence of marked improvements in key performance measures calls for re-assessing the strategic value proposition of management consulting in healthcare settings.
From an academic and educational standpoint, this research has significant implications for career guidance within healthcare management. Bruch notes that many students interested in healthcare transformation seek his advice on entering management consulting. Until now, the scarcity of empirical evidence made it difficult to weigh the effectiveness of consultants in reducing inefficiencies or driving meaningful system-level improvements. Ongoing research in this domain promises to enhance decision-making by prospective professionals aiming to contribute substantively to healthcare reform.
This study serves as a seminal reference point, stimulating further empirical inquiry into the complex dynamics between nonprofit hospitals and external consultants. It emphasizes the importance of evidence-based approaches in evaluating managerial interventions intended to optimize healthcare delivery. Furthermore, the findings remind us that complex health systems require nuanced, multifaceted strategies beyond conventional consulting paradigms to achieve sustainable improvements in quality and cost-efficiency.
As the U.S. healthcare sector continues to navigate financial volatility and policy shifts, understanding the true impact of external consultants on nonprofit hospitals is critical. This research breaks new ground by leveraging innovative data science techniques to unravel these relationships on a national scale. Its insights challenge prevailing assumptions about the efficacy of consulting expenditures and call on stakeholders to pursue rigorous, data-informed strategies when deploying external advisory resources.
Ultimately, this large-scale study not only fills a significant knowledge gap but also opens avenues for reformulating how healthcare organizations seek and utilize external expertise. The evidence suggests that despite sizable investments, management consulting has yet to deliver the transformative effects often promised. For nonprofit hospitals operating at the nexus of community need and fiscal constraint, the imperative is clear: prioritize transparency, demand accountability, and explore new models for achieving meaningful, measurable improvements in health outcomes.
Subject of Research: Analysis of nonprofit hospitals’ financial, operational, and quality of care outcomes following engagement with management consulting firms.
Article Title: Changes in Nonprofit Hospitals’ Finances, Operations, and Quality of Care After Using Management Consultants
News Publication Date: 4-May-2026
Web References:
https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2026.5027
Keywords: nonprofit hospitals, management consulting, healthcare finance, hospital operations, patient outcomes, healthcare efficiency, healthcare management, data analysis, healthcare consulting impact, nonprofit healthcare expenditures

