top | item 40740855

(no title)

stiglitz | 1 year ago

> The median operating margins for hospitals is around 0% or some times negative

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?

discuss

order

asdfsdfas|1 year ago

You're still seeing heavy consolidation in the industry which is a clue something fishy is going on-- why would a hospital system choose to grow for instance? where would the $$ come from to buy other ones?

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

I agree, someone, somewhere is making money off this stuff and know how to hide it or all these hospital groups would be belly up in a few years. What’s even more scary is all the rural hospitals that are going bankrupt at an escalating pace (in the USA). I have lots of “country folk”relatives and I worry about them. The closest hospital to my mother Is 20 miles away, if that one shuts down the closest is 55 miles away. I have at least 5 within 5 miles of me, 2 of which are major regional surgical/oncology centers because I live in an urban area.

JumpCrisscross|1 year ago

> seeing heavy consolidation in the industry which is a clue something fishy is going on-- why would a hospital system choose to grow for instance

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

> why would a hospital system choose to grow for instance? where would the $$ come from to buy other ones

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

The answer is right in the OP:

> 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

Hospitals certainly appear to be operated for the benefit of physicians and administrators, and their compensation is an expense not profit. The relevant statistic is highly compensated leaders, not profit.

EasyMark|1 year ago

You’d have to be pretty naive, I’d say a nonprofit still needs to save some money to handle the ebb and flow of just existing and to have some money tucked away. I’m not sure how that works since I’ve never been part of one, but there has to be a way, because it’s the only pragmatic approach to anything that lasts more than a few months.

mfer|1 year ago

Healthcare systems costs and operations are a mess. Here are a few examples, hospital systems setup places that can do anything which adds complexity and increases costs. So, they are not cost optimized. The more a facility can do the more it costs to do any one thing.

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

I think it means that administrators appear out of the woodwork to consume any potential profit a hospital may make.