Department of Health Policy and Management, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana.
JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Feb 5;3(2):e200012. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.0012.
In the United States, nonprofit hospitals receive tax-exempt status with the expectation that they provide a high level of benefit to local communities. Prior work has shown that Medicaid expansion reduced hospital spending on uncompensated care.
To measure the association of tax-exempt hospital spending with community benefit and changes in uncompensated care after Medicaid expansion.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study was performed using a difference-in-differences analysis (ie, a pre-post treatment-control design) to estimate changes in reported charitable categories associated with Medicaid expansion. Data from Internal Revenue Service form 990, Schedule H, tax filings for 2253 tax-exempt hospitals in the United States from 2012 to 2016 were used. Data were analyzed from June to November 2019.
The proportion of the hospital's tax filing that spanned the period after Medicaid expansion.
Hospital-reported spending on uncompensated care, unreimbursed Medicaid expenses, and other community benefit spending categories.
Across 2253 hospitals, mean (SD) uncompensated care costs between 2012 and 2016 were $4.20 million ($8.80 million) and unreimbursed Medicaid expenses were $7.60 million ($18.62 million). Compared with tax-exempt hospitals in states that did not expand Medicaid, those in states that did expand Medicaid reported mean reductions in their provision of uncompensated care of $1.11 million (95% CI, $0.35 million to $1.87 million; P < .001), representing a mean change of -2% (95% CI, -6% to 2%; P < .001). These reductions have been offset by mean reported increases in the provision of unreimbursed Medicaid expenses of $1.63 million (95% CI, $0.31 million to $2.94 million; P = .02), representing a mean increase of 2% (95% CI, 1% to 4%; P = .01). Tax-exempt hospitals in states that expanded Medicaid reported no statistically significant mean increase in spending on other community benefit activities.
In this study, large decreases in uncompensated care among tax-exempt hospitals associated with Medicaid expansion were not accompanied by increases in other reportable categories of community health benefit spending. Instead, they were accompanied by increased spending on unreimbursed Medicaid expenses.
在美国,非营利性医院享有免税地位,期望它们能为当地社区提供高水平的福利。先前的研究表明,医疗补助计划的扩大减少了医院在无补偿护理上的支出。
衡量免税医院支出与社区福利之间的关联,并衡量医疗补助计划扩大后无补偿护理的变化。
设计、地点和参与者:这项队列研究使用差异中的差异分析(即治疗前-后对照设计)来估计与医疗补助计划扩大相关的慈善类别的报告变化。数据来自美国 2012 年至 2016 年 2253 家免税医院的美国国税局表格 990、附表 H 的纳税申报数据。数据分析于 2019 年 6 月至 11 月进行。
医院纳税申报中跨越医疗补助计划扩大后时期的比例。
医院报告的无补偿护理、未报销的医疗补助支出和其他社区福利支出类别。
在 2253 家医院中,2012 年至 2016 年期间无补偿护理费用的平均值(标准差)为 420 万美元(880 万美元),未报销的医疗补助支出为 760 万美元(1862 万美元)。与没有扩大医疗补助的州的免税医院相比,扩大医疗补助的州的免税医院报告的无补偿护理提供量平均减少 110 万美元(95%可信区间,35 万美元至 187 万美元;P<0.001),代表平均减少 2%(95%可信区间,-6%至 2%;P<0.001)。这些减少被报告的未报销医疗补助支出的平均增加 163 万美元(95%可信区间,3100 万美元至 2.94 亿美元;P=0.02)所抵消,代表平均增加 2%(95%可信区间,1%至 4%;P=0.01)。扩大医疗补助的州的免税医院在其他社区福利活动方面的报告支出没有出现统计学上显著的平均增长。
在这项研究中,与医疗补助计划扩大相关的免税医院的无补偿护理大幅减少,但其他可报告的社区健康福利支出类别并未增加。相反,他们的支出增加了未报销的医疗补助费用。