Cheslik Thomas G, Bukkapatnam Chaitanya, Markert Ronald J, Dabbs Charles H, Ekeh Akpofure Peter, McCarthy Mary C
From the Department of Surgery, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine, Dayton, Ohio.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2016 Jun;80(6):1010-4. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000001052.
Hospital financial pressures and inadequate reimbursement contribute to the closure of trauma centers. Uninsured patients contribute significantly to the burden of trauma center costs. The Affordable Care Act implemented changes in 2014 to provide health care coverage for all Americans. This study analyzes the impact of the recent health care changes on an Ohio Level I trauma center financials.
We conducted an analysis of trauma charges, reimbursement, and supplemental payments at an Ohio Level I trauma center. A 3-year trauma patient cohort (2012-2014) was selected and grouped by reimbursement source (Medicare, Medicaid, other government, commercial, and self-pay/charity). A total of 9,655 patients were reviewed. Data were collected with the Transition Systems Inc. accounting system and analyzed with IBM SPSS Statistics 22.0.
For trauma cases, the percentage of self-pay/charity patients decreased during the 2012 to 2014 period (15.1%, 15%, to 6.4%, respectively), while the percentage of Medicaid decreased from 2012 to 2013 followed by a large increase in 2014 (15.4%, 13.9%, to 24.3%, respectively). The percentage of commercially insured patients decreased slightly from 2012 to 2014 (34.2%, 32.3%, to 30.7%, respectively). Uninsured charges decreased notably (approximately $22.5 million and $21 million for 2012-2013 to approximately $8.6 million in 2014). Medicaid charges decreased from 2012 to 2013, followed by a rebound in 2014 ($50.7 million in 2012 to $37.3 million in 2013 to $54.3 million in 2014). The percentage of total charges for self-pay/charity decreased (9.5%, 10.1%, to 4.1%). The percentage of total charges for Medicaid increased (21.4%, 18.0%, to 25.9%). Mean Medicaid reimbursement per patient decreased ($19,000, $14,000, to $13,000). Mean reimbursement per uninsured patient did not vary significantly among years. Total hospital supplemental payments (trauma and nontrauma combined) decreased ($47.6 million, $49 million, to $39.2 million).
In the first year following the changes implemented by the Affordable Care Act, our hospital saw self-pay/charity charges decrease, Medicaid charges increase, and total hospital supplemental payments decrease. In addition, there was a small, yet noteworthy, downward trend in the number of commercially insured patients. Although more data collection and analysis are needed, this initial financial evaluation of a Level I trauma center following the Affordable Care Act provides insight into insurance trends.
医院的财务压力和报销不足导致创伤中心关闭。未参保患者给创伤中心的成本负担造成了重大影响。《平价医疗法案》于2014年实施了变革,为所有美国人提供医疗保健覆盖。本研究分析了近期医疗保健变革对俄亥俄州一级创伤中心财务状况的影响。
我们对俄亥俄州一级创伤中心的创伤收费、报销和补充支付进行了分析。选取了一个3年的创伤患者队列(2012 - 2014年),并按报销来源(医疗保险、医疗补助、其他政府项目、商业保险和自费/慈善)进行分组。共审查了9655名患者。数据通过Transition Systems Inc.会计系统收集,并使用IBM SPSS Statistics 22.0进行分析。
对于创伤病例,自费/慈善患者的比例在2012年至2014年期间有所下降(分别为15.1%、15%和6.4%),而医疗补助患者的比例在2012年至2013年下降,随后在2014年大幅上升(分别为15.4%、13.9%和24.3%)。商业保险患者的比例从2012年至2014年略有下降(分别为34.2%、32.3%和30.7%)。未参保患者的收费显著下降(2012 - 2013年约为2250万美元和2100万美元,2014年约为860万美元)。医疗补助收费在2012年至2013年下降,随后在2014年反弹(2012年为5070万美元,2013年为3730万美元,2014年为5430万美元)。自费/慈善患者的总收费比例下降(9.5%、10.1%和4.1%)。医疗补助患者的总收费比例上升(21.4%、18.0%和25.9%)。每位医疗补助患者的平均报销金额下降(分别为19000美元、14000美元和13000美元)。每年每位未参保患者的平均报销金额没有显著差异。医院的总补充支付(创伤和非创伤合并)下降(分别为4760万美元、4900万美元和3920万美元)。
在《平价医疗法案》实施变革后的第一年,我们医院的自费/慈善收费下降,医疗补助收费上升,医院总补充支付下降。此外,商业保险患者数量有一个虽小但值得注意的下降趋势。尽管需要更多的数据收集和分析,但这项对一级创伤中心在《平价医疗法案》之后的初步财务评估提供了对保险趋势的洞察。