Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, & Adjunct Associate Professor, Global Health Services and Administration, University of Maryland Global Campus (UMGC), Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2022 Apr;57(2):270-284. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.13668. Epub 2021 May 9.
We examined the characteristics of non-profit hospitals providing more community benefits and charity care than value of their tax exemptions and how this relationship changed between 2011 and 2018.
Primary dataset was schedule H Form IRS 990 data. This data was merged with the American Hospital Association, Medicare Hospital Cost Report, and the America Community Survey.
We measured six categories of tax benefits and 17 types of community benefits. Subtracting the average value of community benefits provided by for-profit hospitals, we computed incremental community benefit and charity care provided by each non-profit hospital.
A nationally representative sample was created of 11 776 non-profit hospital-year observations from 1472 unique hospitals over the 2011 to 2018 period was created. Descriptive analyses and random effect logistic regression were used to show associations between hospital characteristics and difference between incremental net community benefits and the value of tax-exemption.
After adjusting for community benefits provided by for-profits hospitals, on average, non-profit hospitals spent 5.9% (CI: 5.8%-6.0%) of their total expenses on community benefits; 1.3% (CI: 1.2%-1.3%) on charity care; and received 4.3% (CI: 4.2%-4.4%) of total expenses in tax exemptions. A total of 38.5% of non-profit hospitals did not provide more community benefit and 86% did not provide more charity care than the value of their tax exemption. Hospitals with fewer beds, providing residency education and located in high poverty communities were more likely to provide more incremental community benefits and charity care than the value of their tax exemption, while system affiliation had a negative association.
The amount of community benefits and charity care provided by non-profits varied substantially across non-profit hospitals. Establishing minimum requirements for non-profit hospitals or publicly ranking hospitals based on their community benefit or charity care contributions, could encourage greater community benefits and charity care.
我们考察了提供超过免税价值的社区福利和慈善护理的非营利医院的特征,以及这种关系在 2011 年至 2018 年间的变化。
主要数据集是附表 H 表格 IRS990 数据。该数据与美国医院协会、医疗保险医院成本报告和美国社区调查合并。
我们衡量了六类税收优惠和 17 种社区福利。从营利性医院提供的社区福利的平均价值中减去,我们计算了每个非营利医院提供的增量社区福利和慈善护理。
创建了一个由 1472 家独特医院的 11776 个非营利医院年观测值组成的全国代表性样本,这些观测值来自 2011 年至 2018 年期间。使用描述性分析和随机效应逻辑回归来显示医院特征与增量净社区福利和免税价值之间的差异之间的关联。
在调整了营利性医院提供的社区福利后,非营利医院平均将其总支出的 5.9%(CI:5.8%-6.0%)用于社区福利;1.3%(CI:1.2%-1.3%)用于慈善护理;并获得了总支出的 4.3%(CI:4.2%-4.4%)作为免税。共有 38.5%的非营利医院没有提供更多的社区福利,86%的非营利医院没有提供超过其免税价值的慈善护理。床位数较少、提供住院医师教育和位于高贫困社区的医院更有可能提供超过免税价值的增量社区福利和慈善护理,而系统隶属关系则存在负相关。
非营利医院提供的社区福利和慈善护理的数量在非营利医院之间存在很大差异。为非营利医院建立最低要求,或根据其社区福利或慈善护理贡献对医院进行公开排名,可以鼓励提供更多的社区福利和慈善护理。