COVID-19 大流行对医院财务的早期影响。

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Journal of Healthcare Management Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1097/JHM-D-22-00037
Jordan H Rhodes, Tatiane Santos, Gary Young
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目标:COVID-19 大流行病对社会的方方面面都造成了短期和长期的影响。医院是其中最关键的前沿阵地,必须不断应对大流行带来的挑战。在本研究中,我们考察了大流行病爆发后医院的财务表现:我们使用了美国医疗保险与医疗补助服务中心医疗成本报告信息系统的数据。研究样本包括所有接受联邦医疗保险支付的综合急症护理医院和重要通道医院。主要结果包括营业利润率、患者净收入、营业费用和无补偿护理成本。我们测试了医院财务结果从 2019 年到 2020 年的平均变化。我们还测试了按医院特征分层的样本的财务结果变化:所有权类型(投资者所有、非营利和公立)、医疗补助不成比例份额医院状态、农村状态、县未参保率四分位数和医疗补助扩展状态:我们的样本由 4,059 家医院(8,118 个观测值)组成,数据时间跨度为 2019 年和 2020 年。在全部样本医院中,经营利润率在 2019 年至 2020 年间平均下降了 5.3 个百分点,相当于从 2019 年的水平下降了 130%。在利润率下降的背后,患者净收入平均下降了 3.2%,而运营支出则增加了 1.5%。尽管大流行病导致大量人员失业,但我们观察到未补偿医疗成本没有变化。在根据医院特征进行分层分析时,我们发现不同所有制类型的医院存在差异。值得注意的是,与非营利性医院和公立医院相比,投资者所有的医院受到的经济影响较小。尽管安全网医院和农村医院的情况一般不比非安全网医院和非农村医院差,但与未扩大医疗补助范围的州的医院相比,位于扩大医疗补助范围州的医院的营业利润率下降幅度更大,原因是患者收入的相对下降幅度更大:我们观察到的营业利润率下降可归因于供应链问题、持续的劳动力短缺以及选择性服务的暂停。平价医疗法案》对医疗保险市场的改革可能有助于使医院免受无补偿医疗成本增加的影响。在大流行病不断变化的背景下,了解医院的财务状况非常重要,这样才能采取措施应对进一步的财务困境,因为财务困境最终可能导致医院合并加剧、关闭和医疗质量下降。我们的研究结果表明,有必要根据医院的基本特点采取有针对性的应对措施。有针对性地临时提高住院病人和门诊病人的服务价格,可以帮助抵消因推迟非急诊护理而造成的收入损失。其他政策可以解决目前的劳动力挑战和供应链问题。
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The Early Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Hospital Finances.

Goal: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused both short- and long-term impacts on every aspect of society. Hospitals are among the most critical frontliners and have had to continually navigate the challenges caused by the pandemic. In this study, we examined hospitals' financial performance following the onset of the pandemic.

Methods: We used data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Healthcare Cost Report Information System. The study sample included all general acute care and critical access hospitals that receive Medicare payments. The primary outcomes included operating margins, net patient revenues, operating expenses, and uncompensated care costs. We tested for average changes from 2019 to 2020 in hospitals' financial outcomes. We also tested for changes in financial outcomes across samples stratified by hospital characteristics: ownership type (investor-owned, nonprofit, and public), Medicaid disproportionate share hospital status, rural status, county uninsured rate quartile, and Medicaid expansion status.

Principal findings: Our sample consisted of a balanced panel of 4,059 hospitals (8,118 observations) with data spanning 2019 and 2020. Across the full sample of hospitals, operating margins declined by an average of 5.3 percentage points between 2019 and 2020, equating to a 130% reduction from 2019 levels. Underlying these margin declines, net patient revenues declined by 3.2% on average, while operating expenses increased by 1.5%. We observed no changes in uncompensated care costs despite the large number of job losses that accompanied the pandemic. When stratifying the analysis by hospital characteristics, differences were observed across ownership types. Notably, investor-owned facilities were less affected financially than nonprofit and public hospitals. Although safety-net and rural hospitals generally fared no worse than their non-safety-net and nonrural counterparts, hospitals located in Medicaid expansion states experienced steeper declines in operating margins relative to hospitals located in nonexpansion states, driven by larger relative declines in patient revenues.

Practical applications: The operating margin declines we observed can be attributed to supply-chain issues, persistent labor shortages, and suspension of elective services. The Affordable Care Act reforms in health insurance markets likely helped to insulate hospitals from increases in uncompensated care costs. In the shifting context of the pandemic, it is important to understand hospitals' financial performance so that measures can be taken to address further financial distress that may eventually lead to increased consolidation, hospital closures, and lower quality of care. Our findings stress the need for targeted responses that are tailored to underlying hospital characteristics. Temporary and targeted increases in inpatient and outpatient service prices can help offset revenue losses from the deferment of nonurgent care. Other policies can address the ongoing workforce challenges and supply-chain issues.

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来源期刊
Journal of Healthcare Management
Journal of Healthcare Management HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
5.60%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: The Journal of Healthcare Management is the official journal of the American College of Healthcare Executives. Six times per year, JHM offers timely healthcare management articles that inform and guide executives, managers, educators, and researchers. JHM also contains regular columns written by experts and practitioners in the field that discuss management-related topics and industry trends. Each issue presents an interview with a leading executive.
期刊最新文献
A New Era for the Patient Safety Imperative. An Exploratory Study of Dynamic Capabilities and Performance Improvement in Hospitals. Associations Between Integration and Patient Experience in Hospital-Based Health Systems: An Exploration of Horizontal and Vertical Forms of Integration. Associations Between Organizational Support, Burnout, and Professional Fulfillment Among US Physicians During the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic. Burke Kline, DHA, FACHE, CHFP, CEO, Jefferson Community Health & Life.
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