About Health Care Industry

BNET Healthcare provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives, focusing on major health care providers, hospitals and facilities, insurance companies, and medical device manufacturers. In addition to detailed company profiles, you will find detailed industry analysis on new alliances and partnerships, healthcare products, medical patents, health care cost control, lawsuits, management and board changes, and all other important business issues.

AHA Figures Show Rise in Government Underpayments, Charity Care

By Ken Terry | Dec 1, 2009

Hospitals’ cost of providing uncompensated care rose to $36.4 billion in 2008 from $34 billion in 2007, according to the American Hospital Association’s annual report on the subject. Nevertheless, uncompensated care-defined as the combined costs of bad debt and charity care-remained at 5.8 percent of hospitals’ total revenues.

AHA also released its annual report on the underpayment of hospitals by the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Underpayments are defined as the amount by which the payments fall short of the cost of providing care to patients covered by government programs.

In 2008, the AHA says, the underpayments totaled $32.4 billion, up from $31.9 billion the previous year. While this doesn’t look like a big increase, AHA data shows a steady pattern of increasing underpayments, year after year. In 2000, the gap was only $3.8 billion; four years later, it was $22.1 billion.

According to the AHA, the government pays 91 cents of each dollar expended on caring for Medicare patients, and Medicaid pays 89 cents per dollar. The closeness of those two figures is somewhat puzzling, considering that Medicaid pays physicians much less than Medicare does. Perhaps state Medicaid programs have different arrangements with hospitals. In any case, the aggregate underpayment of Medicare is about twice that of Medicaid-a reversal of the ratio in 2000.

Naturally, hospitals try to shift as much of the shortfall from the government programs as possible onto private payers. That cost shifting may fail to compensate for the government underpayments, or it may exceed it, depending on the negotiating ability of particular hospitals and health systems. According to a report from actuarial firm Milliman, Inc., healthcare spending is $1,788 higher for the average family than it would be if Medicare and Medicaid paid providers the same amount that private employers do. Milliman attributes most of that difference to the higher insurance premiums paid as a result of cost shifting.

The participation of hospitals in the government programs is voluntary, but not-for-profit hospitals must participate as a condition of receiving tax exemptions. Considering that hospitals receive 55 percent of their revenues, on average, from Medicare and Medicaid, most would participate in any case.

The AHA argues that the willingness of hospitals to lose money caring for Medicare and Medicaid patients shows their devotion to community benefit. But only 53 percent of hospitals received underpayments from Medicare in 2008, and 56 percent received underpayments from Medicaid.

Another sign of hospitals’ commitment to their charitable mission, the AHA says, is the large amount of uncompensated care they provide. In its fact sheet on this topic, the AHA says it “does not take into account the small number of hospitals that derive the majority of their income from tax appropriations, grants and contributions.” Fair enough, but how does the AHA account for the Medicare disproportionate share payments and the state charity care payments that many hospitals receive? Some hospitals, especially in poorer areas, depend on such government largesse to keep their doors open. But are all hospitals providing as much charity care as they claim?

If hospitals they didn’t give out any freebies, they could double their margins. But most of them don’t pay taxes, either. So weep not for hospitals. Let’s just figure out a way to moderate hospital spending enough so that we don’t all go broke.

Ken Terry, a former senior editor at Medical Economics Magazine, is the author of the book Rx For Health Care Reform. follow all BNET Healthcare posts on Twitter.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Hospital board members 'underpaid': CLP

    ABC - 111 days 2 hours 27 minutes ago

    By David Coady Posted The Northern Territory Opposition is attacking the Government over members of hospital boards being underpaid. The Opposition's health spokesman, Matt Conlan, says he has confirmed the Chairman of the Royal Darwin Hospital board has been significantly underpaid in the last two years and there are probably more. He says...

  • MD officials recommend required charity care for hospitals

    FierceHealthcare - 361 days 7 hours 29 minutes ago

    A state agency responsible for setting hospital rates has suggested that Maryland law be changed to require hospitals to expand charity care levels and give financial-assistance information to every patient. In a new report, the Health Services Cost Review Commission recommended several changes to the state's existing rate-setting system,...

  • Nonprofit Hospitals Need to Earn Their Exemptions

    HealthBeat - 138 days 7 hours 55 minutes ago

    If nonprofit hospitals spend far less money on providing charity care for the poor and uninsured than the value of their federal, state and local tax exemptions, do they deserve those exemptions? What about if they turn away indigent patients or hound them with aggressive collection practices? In May, the Senate Finance Committee chairman Max...

  • SPOTLIGHT: Failure to engage doctors is slowing hospital quality efforts

    FierceHealthcare - 116 days 12 hours 42 minutes ago

    With doctors already feeling overworked, underpaid and underappreciated by hospitals, it's increasingly difficult to get them engaged in quality improvement efforts, a new study suggests. One columnist has suggested that because doctors are spending less time in hospitals, it will take a lot more than an invitation and a smile to get them...

  • TX legislators propose standard for valuing hospital charity care

    FierceHealthcare - 378 days 8 hours 33 minutes ago

    A work group appointed by Texas legislators has proposed a standard for calculating the cost of charity care provided by the state's non-profit hospitals, with the idea of determining the actual value of such care. The proposal is designed to clarify how federal and state indigent-care funding is spent. Right now, it appears that these funds...

 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    notmd

    12/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: AHA Figures Show Rise in Government Underpayments, Charity Care

    Ken..

    Do you know that charity care is not good for the patient?..new york has 2.7 uninsured of which 1.3 mil could be covered but are enrolled in a public program..what incentive do they have to enroll while the hospital down the street is providing charity care in the emergency room and you don't need to fill out any personal papers?..so this patient continues to use the emergency room rather then a PCP and they are unable to fill their prescriptions but that is ok with them because they get charity care(as i call it true hospital insurance)..so what do we have..
    1)states who do not want to see their medicaid payouts increase(therefore minimize enrollment)
    2)patients who would rather not bother.
    3)politicians questioning hospitals tax exempt status therefore promoting charity care
    4)civil liberties happy that patient received service whether it is right or wrong for the long term..
    5)hospitals following the lead that charity care will keep all the above happy..

    we need to change we think about charity care and it's unintended consequences..

  •  
    2

    notmd

    12/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: AHA Figures Show Rise in Government Underpayments, Charity Care

    the second sentence should read "but are not enrolled"

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement