Safety-Net Hospitals Face $1.5 Billion Shortfall by 2019, UCLA Study Says

Safety-Net Hospitals Face $1.5 Billion Shortfall by 2019, UCLA Study Says

Public hospitals taking care of the poorest Californians could be looking at a $1.5 billion shortfall, according to a new study from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

A UCLA study released yesterday made a dire prediction for the state’s public hospital system: The safety-net facilities will likely face a shortfall of between $1.38 billion to $1.54 billion by 2019, when federal funding cuts go into effect.

The cuts will hit the poorest Californians hardest, according to the study.

“Hospitals that can least afford a cut are the most at-risk,” said Dylan Roby, director of the Health Economics and Evaluation Research Program at UCLA’s Center for Health Policy Research. The UCLA study was published in the journal Health Affairs.  

California public hospitals rely on federal funds called disproportionate share hospital payments. DSH payments cover roughly half the costs for 21 facilities across the state. DSH funds, which help offset low Medi-Cal reimbursement, according to the study’s authors, are due to be cut roughly in half starting in 2019.  

According to the study:

 

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