Hospitals ill from more bad debt, credit troubles

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LINDA A. JOHNSON | December 27, 2008 09:31 PM EST | AP

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Dr. Steven Yucht, right, talks with emergency room patient Emogene Brown, left, in the Shands AGH Hospital in Gainesville, Fla., Friday, Dec., 26, 2008. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)

TRENTON, N.J. — Gainesville's first community hospital has been on life support since the Shands Healthcare system in northern Florida bought it a dozen years ago.

Now, because of the recession, the plug is being pulled on 80-year-old, money-losing Shands AGH. Next fall, its eight-hospital not-for-profit parent company will shut the 220-bed hospital and shift staff and patients to a newer, bigger teaching hospital nearby as part of an effort to save $65 million over three years across the system.

Like many U.S. hospitals, Shands is being squeezed by tight credit, higher borrowing costs, investment losses and a jump in patients _ many recently unemployed or otherwise underinsured _ not paying their bills.

All that has begun to trigger more hospital closings _ from impoverished Newark, N.J., to wealthy Beverly Hills, Calif. _ as well as layoffs, other cost-cutting and scrapping or delaying building projects.

More closings and mergers are on the way, industry consultants predict.

"They'll get swallowed up by somebody else, if they need to exist, and if they don't, they'll just close," said Tuck Crocker, vice president of the health care practice at management consultant BearingPoint.

Most endangered are rural hospitals and urban ones in areas with excess hospital beds and a lot of poor, uninsured patients.

Hospitals, which employ 5 million people, are reporting that donations and investment returns are down, patient visits are flat and profitable diagnostic procedures and elective surgeries are declining as people with inadequate insurance delay care. But those patients are turning up later at ERs, seriously ill, making it tough for hospitals to lay off nurses and doctors.

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All those problems are aggravating long-standing stresses: stingy reimbursements from commercial insurers, even-lower payments that generally don't cover costs for Medicare and Medicaid patients, and high labor and technology costs.

Hospital executives and consultants say the growing number of people with high-deductible health plans is boosting unpaid patient bills. Many worry health reform efforts by the Obama administration could bring cuts in Medicare reimbursements, and many cash-strapped states already have begun cutting payments for poor people covered by Medicaid.

In the past few months, patients and insurers have been paying hospital bills more slowly. As a result, some think hospitals will start demanding up-front payments for elective procedures.

In November, Moody's Investors Service changed its 12- to 18-month outlook from "stable" to "negative" for nonprofit and for-profit hospitals, citing "prospects of a protracted recession," bad debt and the credit crunch.

"Looking forward, the cost of borrowing will likely be higher _ and may be nonexistent for lower-rated hospitals," Moody's noted, a problem because hospitals borrow for everything from expansions and equipment to payroll and supplies.

Since October, there's been "a dramatic slowdown" in plans for new wings and building upgrades, with many delayed indefinitely, said Paul Keckley of the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions.

"It probably means we won't have as many new things in the hospital," he predicted.

Tim Goldfarb, CEO of Gainesville-based Shands Healthcare, said his system, Florida's second-largest provider of charity care, this year has seen bad debt jump 20 percent from patients with no insurance.

"We write them off," Goldfarb said. "It's a burden that we cannot carry any longer."

Florida started cutting Medicaid reimbursements two years ago, when its economy started to slow, Goldfarb said. He fears another huge cut next year.

Shands already has paid off variable-rate bonds to avoid higher interest rates, deferred roughly $25 million in equipment purchases, shifted management meetings to church halls and adopted employee suggestions to save millions more.

Goldfarb believes closing Shands AGH will save nearly $100 million over seven years, mainly by avoiding costly renovations, but some administrative jobs will go.

Around the country, while some hospitals still are doing well, closings and bankruptcies seem to be picking up.

In New Jersey, where 47 percent of hospitals posted losses in 2007, five of the 79 acute-care hospitals closed this year, and a sixth may close soon. In Hawaii, nearly every hospital is in trouble, with two filing for bankruptcy and one nearly closing recently.

All over, hospitals are cutting costs by outsourcing services like housekeeping and security and trimming staff through layoffs, hiring freezes and attrition. Most are trying not to touch patient care jobs _ nurses, pharmacists, therapists and X-ray technicians _ as those already have staff shortages.

"The last thing we can do is skinny down our staffing right where we need it the most," said Mike Killian, marketing vice president for the three Beaumont Hospitals in suburban Detroit.

There, auto industry job losses and other factors now equal fewer patients with commercial insurance. The system expects a $22 million loss, its first in at least 40 years, Killian said.

So Beaumont this fall announced a $60 million restructuring program that includes 4-10 percent pay cuts for doctors and managers, reducing overtime for some employees and eliminating 500 jobs, 200 already vacant, mostly outside of patient care. Rich Umbdenstock, chief executive of the American Hospital Association, said some of the hardest-hit hospitals began reducing staffing and services as early as last spring and more will follow. He expects some to eliminate services _ money-losers such as behavioral health treatment, or those with high operating costs such as burn units _ rather than weaken their entire operation.

An association survey of more than 700 hospitals found two-thirds have seen elective procedures and overall admissions fall since July, and half have seen moderate or significant jumps in nonpaying patients.

An industry database on more than 550 hospitals found their third-quarter investment results amounted to a combined loss of $832 million, down from a $396 million gain a year earlier. During the quarter, those hospitals paid 15 percent more in borrowing costs and swung to a 1.6 percent average loss, from an average 6.1 percent profit margin a year ago.

"They're having serious problems getting the capital they need for needed renovations and upgrading their facilities," said Mike Rock, a lobbyist at AHA, which is seeking increased federal reimbursements from Medicaid and Medicare.

At Exempla Healthcare, with three hospitals in Denver and its suburbs, Chief Executive Jeff Selberg said there's usually a 5-7 percent annual profit margin, but this year investment losses wiped that out. He's scaled back a $200 million plan to upgrade facilities, information technology and clinical equipment and may halt construction of a new maternity unit and operating rooms at one hospital.

Selberg has seen a slight increase in bad debt and expects more problems.

"We feel like the wave is coming, but it hasn't hit yet, and we don't know how big this wave is going to be," he said.

TRENTON, N.J. — Gainesville's first community hospital has been on life support since the Shands Healthcare system in northern Florida bought it a dozen years ago. Now, because of the recession...
TRENTON, N.J. — Gainesville's first community hospital has been on life support since the Shands Healthcare system in northern Florida bought it a dozen years ago. Now, because of the recession...
 
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capitalism at it's finest... the instrument of freedom loving peoples everywhere... and we will force it on you at the point of a gun if you don't like it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 12/29/2008

Like everything else this unregulated, unplanned economic system has wrought a surfeit of hospitals. We must cut out maybe half of the nation's hospitals which will cut health costs. Such cutting must be nationally managed but decentralized and guarantee quality, accessible care for all citizens. Since helath care by definition is monopolistic, it must be managed as such. the Reagon and Republican doctrine rationalized that naturally occurring monopolies needed no regulation. We have nothing but bankrupting and inefficient organizations resulting from such self-serving economic dogma. What a damned mess we are in. The bunch who cooked up this greatest economic system in the world must at the least be ostracized.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 PM on 12/28/2008
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folks in all reality, a US hospital is one of the most dangerous places you can ever be
1. deliberately chronically short staffed of nurses to save $$$- tired, hurried nurses with way too many patients could kill you with medication errors or just plain unintended neglect. Keep an eye out there. Check out the medical mistake numbers in US hospitals.
2. the rise of the new super drug resistant germs have taken over. MRSA, C Diff infest our health care institutions in all forms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 PM on 12/28/2008
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well, the GOP has pretty much shut down most of the mental hospitals and put those people in prison
and the medical ones have just been another "house of cards" anyway. But the CEO's of those hospitals make hundreds of thousands! and drive incredible cars with expense accounts and houses in Aspen and oh, just live like kings! Sorry, your family member can't get in, though.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 PM on 12/28/2008

TORT REFORM! Doctors have to stop being afraid of being sued all the time that's why they order every test!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 PM on 12/28/2008
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after 25 years in US medicine I will say that in America, all medicine is just CYA

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 PM on 12/28/2008

Ask the insurance companies how much profit they made!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 PM on 12/28/2008
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and drug companies! They are busy making viagra for the afgan warlords instead of developing new antibiotics to fight the superbugs that the Drs and corporations have allowed to flourish.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 PM on 12/28/2008

If you go to a university or similar hospital, ask the "doctor" (possibly a first year intern with 3 weeks of experience) how many hours they have been "on call." They could be in their 29th or 30th hour with no sleep. How do I know, "the shadows knows."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:30 PM on 12/28/2008

Technically, this is not supposed to be the case anymore, but they have found ways to get around it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 PM on 12/28/2008

You can add outpatient health providers to the list of those "not getting paid." Insurances companies are finding all sorts of ways to get out of paying doctors, therapists, etc. And patients are even going without paying their copays, especially if they are billed afterward. Be prepared to pay for your services upfront in 2009.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 PM on 12/28/2008

We need to stop illegal immigration, we cannot afford to provide medical care to US citizens, let alone the poor from mexico!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 PM on 12/28/2008

What I'm not reading here is any mention of tort reform. Currently, there is no disincentive to initiating frivolous lawsuits. Even if a case has no merit, it can tie up physicians and hospital lawyers for months/years before it is dismissed. This adds tremendous cost to the system. Then add redundant charting and other paperwork plus unnecessary tests solely for the purpose of ass covering. These costs do not improve quality of care. Health care is an art and a science but results cannot be guaranteed simply because the human body is so complex. Infections happen, bones don't knit properly, arteries get re-clogged. S**t happens despite our best efforts. True malpractice must be severely punished BUT a bad result does not necessarily equal malpractice. And, a bad result , however minor, should not be viewed as a potential lottery winning. Besides, who gets the bulk of the jury award? The trial lawyer. Let's put fairness and reasonableness back into our health care system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 PM on 12/28/2008

Good post. Check out commongood.org for info about a good solution, health courts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 PM on 12/28/2008
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right... tort reform, illegal aliens, and uninsured cretins using the emergency room... it has nothing to do with the general economy and insurance companies ripping us off!! Tort reform is nothing but an insurance industry swindle.... real tort reform would be to limit lawyers fees to a dollar amount... like $250,000. no multi million dollar percentages... that is tort reform. but that will never happen because they have money behind them and they make the laws... so again, we are left to use emergency room medical care until they close the hospitals.... great country we live in huh...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 AM on 12/29/2008

I thought the unfettered free market was supposed to take care of all this. How disappointing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 12/28/2008

Hospitals, health ins companies and big pharma.... all publicly traded entities, which means that they not only sell stock, they invest our purchases (premiums, deductibles, etc...) from them on the open market. So, what this basically means is that if they make bad investment decisions and lose billions we pay thru increases in our insurance premiums, services and drugs. Humanity and morality need to make a return to this industry.
1. Limit the open market trading of their stocks or turn them private. The countries health care system should not be profit first, stockholder second and patient/customer third. How some of these people sleep at nite amazes me...
2. Regulate where they invest profits. No derivatives, credit default swaps or other get rich quick schemes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 12/28/2008

Medical care is a basic right of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, not a "for-profit" commodity. Two hundred years from now, people will look back at this appalling failure to provide universal health care the same way we look back at the institution of slavery.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 12/28/2008

You're absolutely correct, Halter. Health care should never have been "for profit", and insurance companies should be abolished. They're a forced scam on the people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:30 PM on 12/28/2008

When you allow 20 million illegal immigrants to enter the country, and most of those use the extremely expensive Emergency Department as their "primary care" facility, just what do you expect? By government regulation, ERs cannot turn ANYONE away (see EMTALA). Hospitals are forced to extend paying-patient subsidized care to any and all uninsured who come through the door. When the number of freeloaders finally exceeds the number of "paying" patients, the hospital has no choice but to close. How many restaurants could survive if they were required to serve meals to anyone and everyone who came through the door, regardless of whether they could or would pay for their meal?

This idiocy can be laid directly at the feet of the government, with a non-existant immigration policy, and unrealistic regulations that oblige hospitals to give away expensive medical services as a freebie.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 12/28/2008
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Oh, but of course...

Let's all blame the Brown People, the favorite scapegoat of the xenophobes, closet-Klukkers and GOP'ers.

Health care is a HUMAN right, regardless of citizenship.

National single-payer healthcare NOW, Congress and Obama!

Are you listening to the people?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 12/28/2008

Geez its not just about being xenophobic. I'm a proud liberal but I also have common sense. For years I've been reading about these financial troubles for hospitals because of illegal immigrants. Even if some of my fellow members of the left do not want to admit it it is a financial burden,. Sure its not the only one but it arguably could be the biggest problem facing hundreds of hospitals. Its something that needs to be addressed which is something the article above clearly tried not to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 PM on 12/28/2008

Health care is not a right for illegals. Emergency care or life threatening situations, yes, otherwise no. You saying it doesn't make it so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 PM on 12/28/2008

Interesting picture to accompany this article because based on the picture and the patient in the picture, how much of her ailment was caused by her obesity? Just wonder if the hospitals wouldn't be in so much trouble if people lived healthier lifestyles.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 PM on 12/28/2008
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