Charity Care Spending By Hospitals Plunges

image of couple sitting in living room on carpet

 

Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans gained health insurance, mainly as a consequence of the Medicaid Expansion. As a result, hospital expenditures on charity care have more than halved. But is that the only explanation? Some experts suggest that “reduced spending on charity care [is] part of a trend of nonprofit hospitals acting more like their for-profit counterparts” and note that many nonprofit hospitals “no longer consider charity care their primary mission.” Learn more about how non-profit hospitals can be extremely profitable

 

California hospitals are providing significantly less free and discounted care to low-income patients since the Affordable Care Act took effect.

As a proportion of their operating expenses, the state’s general acute-care hospitals spent less than half on these patients in 2017 than they did in 2013, according to data the hospitals reported to California’s Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development.

California HealthLine. 

The biggest decline in charity care spending occurred from 2013 to 2015, when it dropped from just over 2% to just under 1%. The spending has continued to decline, though less dramatically, since then.

The decline was true of for-profit hospitals, so-called nonprofit hospitals and those designated as city, county, district or state hospitals.

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