MacDougall Hannah, Latcham Melissa, Eliason Erica
Department/School of Social Work, School of Social Work, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA.
Melissa Latcham and School of Public Health, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
J Rural Health. 2025 Jan;41(1):e12914. doi: 10.1111/jrh.12914.
US nonprofit hospitals must provide community benefits including financial assistance to be tax-exempt. Rural residents particularly benefit from financial assistance because they have higher medical debt on average. The Internal Revenue Service allows nonprofit hospitals that are members of health systems to report expenditures for their entire system (group returns) rather than for individual hospitals. Our study examined how (if at all) rural nonprofit hospitals filing group returns are different than those filing individual returns.
We used 2021 data extracted from Community Benefit Insight and the American Hospital Association for 100 rural nonprofit hospitals in Wisconsin and Minnesota. We conducted bivariate analyses examining differences in mean total community benefit spending and mean financial assistance spending as a percentage of total operating expenses for hospitals filing individual versus group returns. We conducted multivariable regression models examining the association of filing group returns and individual returns with community benefit spending and financial assistance spending.
Bivariate analysis revealed significant differences between group return hospitals and individual return hospitals in spending on community benefits (5.81% vs. 9.49%, respectively) and on financial assistance (0.36% vs. 0.71% respectively). Multivariable regression demonstrated filing group returns is significantly negatively associated with community benefit expenditures (β = -2.90, p < 0.05) and financial assistance expenditures (β = -0.31, p < 0.01).
In our sample, filing group returns was associated with less spending on community benefits and financial assistance. To understand this finding, researchers need data on individual hospital spending to increase transparency and accountability.
美国非营利性医院必须提供包括经济援助在内的社区福利才能获得免税资格。农村居民尤其受益于经济援助,因为他们平均医疗债务更高。美国国税局允许作为医疗系统成员的非营利性医院报告其整个系统的支出(合并申报),而非单个医院的支出。我们的研究考察了提交合并申报的农村非营利性医院与提交单独申报的医院有何不同(若存在不同的话)。
我们使用了从《社区福利洞察》和美国医院协会提取的2021年数据,涉及威斯康星州和明尼苏达州的100家农村非营利性医院。我们进行了双变量分析,考察提交单独申报与合并申报的医院在社区福利总支出均值以及经济援助支出均值占总运营费用百分比方面的差异。我们构建了多变量回归模型,考察提交合并申报和单独申报与社区福利支出及经济援助支出之间的关联。
双变量分析显示,合并申报医院和单独申报医院在社区福利支出(分别为5.81%和9.49%)以及经济援助支出(分别为0.36%和0.71%)方面存在显著差异。多变量回归表明,提交合并申报与社区福利支出(β = -2.90,p < 0.05)和经济援助支出(β = -0.31,p < 0.01)显著负相关。
在我们的样本中,提交合并申报与社区福利和经济援助支出减少有关。为理解这一发现,研究人员需要有关单个医院支出的数据,以提高透明度和问责制。