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by Retric
3169 days ago
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Having a high percentage of Medicare Patients is not enough to qualify on it's own. "Applies to hospitals that serve a signi cantly disproportionate number of low-income patients; and
Is based on the disproportionate patient percentage (DPP)." Medicare pays enough to cover care and operating overhead. It's not enough to cover significant writeoffs for non Medicare patients. |
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Medicare does not even pay enough to cover costs of care, let alone operating overhead: http://classic.ncmedicaljournal.com/wp-content/uploads/NCMJ/...
> For the first 18 years of Medicare's existence, the program paid hospitals for the "cost" of the care provided. However, since 1983, the payments have been slowly declining in relationship to the actual cost of providing care, and now hospitals are receiving less in payments than the actual cost of the care. How do hospitals recover this shortfall? Simple: they pass it on to other payers.