UNC map; click the image to enlarge it. |
The first brief compares the percentage of rural hospitals at high risk of financial distress in each state. As the map above shows, the Black Belt, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Texas are the worst off.
The second brief outlines the characteristics associated with communities served by hospitals at high risk of financial distress. Those communities tend to have higher minority populations, lower high school graduation rates, higher unemployment rates, and more adults who are obese, use tobacco, and/or suffer premature deaths.
UNC map; click the image to enlarge it. Refer to the third brief for definitions of different CMS reimbursement types. |
The brief also shows that hospitals with a Prospective Payment System now tend to be at greater financial risk than Medicare Dependent Hospitals, though both types are at increasing risk (as shown above). A PPS means that the government reimburses hospitals for Medicare and Medicaid patients' care with a predetermined, fixed payment. An MDH is a small rural hospital with at least 60 percent of its inpatient days or discharges attributable to Medicare beneficiaries. MDHs also can't be the sole community hospital.
from The Rural Blog http://bit.ly/2J5qvD8 Research shows which states and which kinds of towns have rural hospitals at high risk of financial distress - Entrepreneur Generations
0 Response to "Research shows which states and which kinds of towns have rural hospitals at high risk of financial distress - Entrepreneur Generations"
Post a Comment