University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA.
J Healthc Manag. 2012 Jan-Feb;57(1):66-76; discussion 77-8.
US policymakers continue to call into question the tax-exempt status of hospitals. As nonprofit tax-exempt entities, hospitals are required by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to report the type and cost of community benefits they provide. Institutional theory indicates that organizations derive organizational legitimacy from conforming to the expectations of their environment. Expectations from the state and federal regulators (the IRS, state and local taxing authorities in particular) and the community require hospitals to provide community benefits to achieve legitimacy. This article examines community benefit through an institutional theory framework, which includes regulative (laws and regulation), normative (certification and accreditation), and cultural-cognitive (relationship with the community including the provision of community benefits) pillars. Considering a review of the results of a 2006 IRS study of tax-exempt hospitals, the authors propose a model of hospital community benefit behaviors that distinguishes community benefits between cost-quantifiable activities appropriate for justifying tax exemption and unquantifiable activities that only contribute to hospitals' legitimacy.
美国政策制定者继续质疑医院的免税地位。作为非营利免税实体,医院被美国国税局(IRS)要求报告其提供的社区福利的类型和成本。制度理论表明,组织通过符合其环境的期望来获得组织合法性。来自州和联邦监管机构(特别是 IRS、州和地方税务当局)和社区的期望要求医院提供社区福利以获得合法性。本文通过制度理论框架(包括监管(法律和法规)、规范(认证和认可)和文化认知(与社区的关系,包括提供社区福利)支柱)来考察社区福利。考虑到对 2006 年 IRS 对免税医院进行的一项研究结果的审查,作者提出了一个医院社区福利行为模型,该模型区分了适合证明免税的可量化成本活动和仅有助于医院合法性的不可量化活动之间的社区福利。