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stiglitz | 1 year ago
I found this page that seems to agree- https://www.definitivehc.com/resources/healthcare-insights/h...
That shows a negative median operating margin for the last 5 years. How can an industry carry on losing money like this? This must be only part of the story, right?
asdfsdfas|1 year ago
The answer is hospitals target negative operating margins to meet various rules-- even though their "surplus" (ie profit) isn't taxed, it has to be near-0 to maintain non profit status. And, besides the normal games of revenue timing and amortization, they expense profitable activities to related parties.
EasyMark|1 year ago
JumpCrisscross|1 year ago
Economies of scale. When an industry faces headwinds, characterised by broad-based low or negative operating margins, the standard move is consolidation.
alephnerd|1 year ago
Not all networks are for-profit.
By merging into larger networks, you allow hospital networks to consolidate the very expensive back-office processes like billing, insurance, IT, procurement, staffing, etc.
All the intermediate "glue" needed for medical care has grown expensive due to either compliance or general profiteering, which forced consolidation in order to leverage economies of scale.
This is why both for-profit and non-profit networks have been increasingly merging.
ndriscoll|1 year ago
> More than half (55 percent) of all the income generated by 501(c)(3) organizations comes from tax-exempt hospitals and health-care plans.
They can carry on losing money because they are often charities. Isn't a 0% or less margin what most people would naively expect for a charity?
unyttigfjelltol|1 year ago
EasyMark|1 year ago
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
mfer|1 year ago
Hospitals loose money on many procedures while making some money back on others.
There is also costs around staffing. For example, nursing schools aren't producing the growing number of nurses needed. Supply and demand kicks in.
jandrese|1 year ago
yencabulator|1 year ago