Kansas City,
22
September
2016
|
12:49 PM
America/Chicago

Children’s hospitals lose money on kids with Medicaid

It’s a bit surprising how much money children’s hospitals lose from caring for children with Medicaid.
Dr. Jeffrey D. Colvin, Children’s Mercy

Children’s hospitals lose more money than other facilities treating children covered by Medicaid and may be under pressure in 2018 when federal payments compensating for this loss are reduced, according to a new study.

Medicaid typically pays less than what it costs a hospital to provide service, the authors write, and U.S. hospitals lost $14.1 billion in 2014 from Medicaid underpayment. Federal Disproportionate Share Hospital payments (DSH) are designed to compensate hospitals that cover uninsured or Medicaid insured patients, but as the Affordable Care Act reduces the number of uninsured people in the U.S., DSH payments are scheduled to be reduced annually by $2 billion in 2018.

More than a third of U.S. children are insured by Medicaid, according to the authors of the study.

“It’s a bit surprising how much money children’s hospitals lose from caring for children with Medicaid,” said lead author Dr. Jeffrey D. Colvin of Children’s Mercy Kansas City.

Financial records from children’s hospitals from around the country showed that half the institutions were losing more $40 million dollars a year, he said.

The researchers used hospital discharges of Medicaid-insured patients age 20 and younger from 23 states in 2009 from teaching hospitals, nonteaching hospitals, children’s hospitals within larger hospitals, and freestanding children’s hospitals.

Freestanding children’s hospitals had a higher median number of Medicaid insured discharges than teaching hospitals and nonteaching hospitals: more than 4,000 compared to less than 1,000 for non-children’s hospitals.

Freestanding children’s hospitals also took the biggest financial loss, more than $9 million per hospital from March to September of 2015. Teaching hospitals and non-teaching hospitals lost $200,000 and $28,000 over the same period. DSH payments made up for about half of Medicaid losses for freestanding children’s hospitals, the research team reported in JAMA Pediatrics.

“The overall financial position of any hospital will depend on their percentage of patients with Medicaid insurance, their commercial reimbursement rates, and other ways in which they recover uncompensated costs, such as philanthropic donations or federal safety-net hospital subsidies,” Colvin told Reuters Health by email. “For any hospital that operates very close to the margin - whether it’s a children’s hospital or a non-children’s hospital - the scope of under-compensated or uncompensated care is extremely important and may determine whether the hospital is financially viable or not.”

Most children’s hospitals try to serve children in need of medical care regardless of insurance coverage, he said.

“But hospitals’ ability to continue to absorb these losses in any kind of sustainable way really does then rely on things that are somewhat outside of their control (such as) their commercial contracts, philanthropy, and state and federal subsidies,” he said.

Americans should be aware that Medicaid - one of the most critical and effective lifelines for children that exists in this country - is drastically underfunded, Colvin said.

 

Read the full story via Reuters.