The CVS Effect in Veterinary Medicine
What happens when consolidation shifts bargaining power?
Consolidation changes ownership. It also changes leverage.
In the early stages of consolidation, labor tends to win. Signing bonuses rise. Compensation climbs. Recruiters compete aggressively. Narratives of shortage dominate.
Veterinary medicine has been in that phase for several years.
But consolidation follows predictable cycles. And so do labor markets.
As consolidation increases and labor supply expands, bargaining power shifts – from clinician to operator. The shift is rarely ideological. It is arithmetic.
We have seen this pattern before.
When CVS Health accelerated acquisitions, it entered fragmented markets, attracted pharmacists with competitive compensation, and expanded its geographic footprint rapidly. Early on, labor leverage was strong.
Over time, independent alternatives narrowed. Market density increased. Optionality compressed.
Bargaining power recalibrated.
Similarly, in vertically integrated health systems such as UnitedHealthcare – where insurance, care delivery, and infrastructure operate within a unified ecosystem – labor markets behave differently once capital controls multiple layers of the value chain.
Veterinary medicine is not pharmacy. It is not human healthcare.
Read the Full Analysis…
Veterinary consolidation has reshaped the profession over the past decade, driving higher compensation, increased competition for talent, and expanded corporate investment across the industry.
But consolidation cycles evolve. As ownership concentrates and labor supply expands, the bargaining power dynamics that fueled rapid salary growth begin to shift.
This article explores how veterinary consolidation changes leverage within the profession—and why the durability of today’s compensation models may become a central question for operators, investors, and clinicians alike.
