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Oregon SB 951: New Restrictions on the Corporate Practice of Medicine . . . This legislation reinforces and expands Oregon's existing restrictions on the corporate practice of medicine, as well as the state's longstanding bar against non-licensed individuals and entities exercising influence or control over medical decision-making
Oregon SB 951 - Kirkland Ellis LLP On June 9, 2025, Oregon Governor Tina Kotek signed Senate Bill 951 into law, marking a turning point in how states regulate private investment in medical practices SB 951 strengthens Oregon’s corporate practice of medicine (CPOM) doctrine and introduces new restrictions on “friendly PC” arrangements including codifying existing CPOM prohibitions and introducing new prohibitions on dual
Oregon Enacts SB 951, Restricting PE-Backed MSOs in Physician Practice . . . On June 9, 2025, Oregon enacted Senate Bill 951 (SB 951), a sweeping new law significantly limiting how management services organizations (MSOs)—including those backed by private-equity firms—may engage with physician practices The legislation targets traditional “friendly provider” models by restricting ownership and operational control of professional medical entities and voiding
Oregon Senate Bill 951 Reshapes Medical Practice Ownership Senate Bill 951 (“SB 951” or the “Law”) imposes broad restrictions on how non-professional parties, such as private equity firms and other non-physician investors, participate in the ownership,
Oregon Governor Signs SB 951, Significantly Restricting Corporate . . . Reflecting a broader national trend to limit the role of private equity and management services organizations (MSOs) in healthcare, Oregon has enacted one of the most restrictive laws in the country targeting the corporate practice of medicine (CPOM) On June 9, 2025, Governor Tina Kotek signed
Oregon’s SB 951: Reshaping Corporate Influence in Healthcare Through . . . By closing loopholes in Oregon’s 78-year-old Corporate Practice of Medicine (CPOM) doctrine and implementing strict new controls on management services organizations (MSOs), the bill fundamentally rebalances power dynamics in healthcare delivery while testing the limits of state regulatory authority over corporate investment structures [11] [15]
Oregon Imposes Major Restrictions on PC-MSO Models (SB 951) Oregon has enacted some of the nation’s strictest corporate practice of medicine (CPOM) restrictions, targeting digital health companies and private equity-backed healthcare providers that use the affiliated professional corporation model (often called a “friendly physician” or “PC-MSO” model) — a common structure that allows lay entities to secure the services of physicians