Number of hospitals at immediate or high risk of closure before pandemic. CHQPR map; click the image to enlarge it. |
A newly updated report from the nonpartisan Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform lists the more than 800 rural hospitals—40 percent of all rural hospitals in the U.S.—in danger of closing even before the pandemic. That includes over 500 hospitals that were at an immediate risk of closure because of longterm financial losses and lack of financial reserves. Another 300 hospitals are at high risk of closure in the near future, most because of low financial reserves or high dependence on revenue from non-patient sources such as local taxes or state subsidies. The report is based on the latest data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Almost all of the rural hospitals at immediate risk are in isolated rural communities, making such locations all the more critical to locals, the report says. Almost every state had at least one rural hospital at immediate risk, and in 22 states, at least a quarter of rural hospitals are at immediate risk. In every state, more than 20% of rural hospitals are at high or immediate risk of closing, and in 14 states, the majority of rural hospitals are at high or immediate risk of closing. Click here for a searchable database of all rural hospitals in the U.S.
Many more hospitals may be at risk due to the pandemic. "Margins at many hospitals may be worse in 2020 because of the combination of the higher costs hospitals incurred during the pandemic and the reduction in revenues because patients avoided seeking non-emergency services," the report says.
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