Noncompete clauses out for some Indianapolis hospital doctors
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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowA medical group for an Indianapolis hospital has taken the unusual step of eliminating noncompete clauses from its physicians’ contracts, allowing them to join rival health care systems without repercussion.
Eskenazi Medical Group has opted to do away with the clauses, The Indianapolis Star reported Monday. Indiana legislators passed a law this year barring primary care physicians and employers from signing noncompete clauses. Eskenazi’s move goes farther, doing away with such clauses for about 50 of the group’s 270 health care providers, including physicians and advanced practice providers at Eskenazi Health and its downtown Indianapolis hospital.
Eskenazi Medical Group CEO Curtis Wright said the group doesn’t want doctors who aren’t good fits and never really felt noncompete clauses were necessary.
Noncompete clauses have become standard language in physician contracts, said Kenneth Dau-Schmidt, the Carr professor of labor and employment law at Indiana University’s Maurer School of Law. But they are growing unpopular across multiple industries nationwide, and the Federal Trade Commission is considering banning them.
Dau-Schmidt said Eskenzai’s decision to eliminate noncompete clauses could be a recruiting advantage. The broader implications for Indiana’s health care industry are unclear, though, because Eskenzai is just one hospital.
Brian Tabor, president of the state hospital association, said he doesn’t expect other health systems to follow suit.
Indiana University Health, which also has doctors who work at Eskenazi Hospital, said it was continuing to evaluate its continued use of noncompete clauses.