Department of Health Administration, Governors State University, University Park, Illinois, USA.
J Healthc Manag. 2009 Nov-Dec;54(6):383-401; discussion 401-2.
Community hospitals in the United States have experienced a substantial rise in the burden of uncompensated care over the past few years. Debate continues, however, about whether hospitals, especially private not-for-profits, are providing sufficient levels of uncompensated care. Increased scrutiny regarding uncompensated care and the community benefit of not-for-profit hospitals may be fueled in part by the growing profitability of community hospitals. This study assesses how and whether a hospital's financial performance, mission characteristics, or other significant factors influence its provision of uncompensated care. The study sample consists of 193 short-term, private, acute care community hospitals in California. Results from multivariate regression suggest that free cash flow is positively associated with the provision of uncompensated care in not-for-profit hospitals, whereas a higher level of debt is related to a lower level of uncompensated care. Ownership type (for-profit versus private not-for-profit) does not make a significant difference in the provision of uncompensated care, and overall levels of uncompensated care in the local market are positively associated with a hospital's level of uncompensated care.
美国的社区医院在过去几年中经历了无偿医疗负担的大幅增加。然而,关于医院,特别是私立非营利医院是否提供了足够水平的无偿医疗服务,仍存在争议。对无偿医疗和非营利医院的社区效益的审查日益增加,部分原因可能是社区医院的盈利能力不断增强。本研究评估了医院的财务业绩、使命特征或其他重要因素如何以及是否影响其提供无偿医疗服务。研究样本包括加利福尼亚州的 193 家短期、私营、急性护理社区医院。多元回归的结果表明,自由现金流与非营利医院提供无偿医疗服务呈正相关,而较高的债务水平与较低的无偿医疗服务呈负相关。所有制类型(营利性与私立非营利性)在无偿医疗服务的提供方面没有显著差异,当地市场的无偿医疗服务总体水平与医院的无偿医疗服务水平呈正相关。