Sunday, July 03, 2022

New report offers short- and long-term solutions to help rural hospitals survive as they move out of the pandemic

Federal pandemic money shored up rural hospitals as they worked to care for increased volumes of critically ill patients, but many of them were at risk of closure before Covid-19 hit, and the financial challenges creating that risk have not gone away, so "Rural hospitals that were struggling before the pandemic will once again be at risk of closure unless additional action is taken to shore up these facilities," says a new report from the Bipartisan Policy Center.

The report, The Impact of COVID-19 on the Rural Health Care Landscape, examines the ongoing financial and workforce-related challenges facing rural hospitals through the lens of eight states: Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming. It lays out short- and long-term policy recommendations to strengthen rural care, as well as ones to serve as a bridge as health-care systems exit the pandemic.

The pace of rural hospital closures slowed during the pandemic, due in large part to the federal relief provided to hospitals nationwide. "In 2021, only two hospitals closed, down from 19 in 2020, marking a significant reduction from the 138 closures between 2010 and 2020," the report says. 

George Pink, deputy director of North Carolina Rural Health Research Program at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, said in a June 29 webinar, "This funding really allowed many hospitals to survive during the pandemic, and probably prevented many rural hospitals from closing," reports Melissa Patrick of Kentucky Health News.

Pink ticked off a list of challenges rural hospitals face. First, they serve small populations that are typically older, sicker, under-insured or uninsured. Also, they have low patient numbers that don't create enough revenue to cover the fixed cost of a 24-hour emergency department; high percentages of patients on Medicare, programs that often don't cover the cost of care; and struggles with recruiting health-care providers.

With the last pandemic funds soon to be distributed, Pink said he expects rural hospitals to fall to pre-pandemic levels of profitability. "In fact, profitability can decline even faster because of what hospitals are now having to pay for labor, particularly nursing," he said.

Bipartisan Policy Center graphic; for a larger version, click on it. 
Of the eight states the Bipartisan Policy Center reviewed for this report, the percentage of hospitals experiencing at least three consecutive years of negative total operating margins ranged from 6% in Nevada to a high of 38% in Wyoming. 

The BPC also assessed the financial vulnerability of 2,176 rural hospitals between 2017 and 2020. It found that 909 had two or more concurrent financial risk factors that put them at risk of service reduction or closure; 441 of them faced three or more risk factors; and 173 of them had four or more. The factors included negative operating margins (total and on patient services alone), negative current net assets, and negative total net assets.

Asked if their hospitals would survive without the federal relief money, Joan Hall, president of Nevada Rural Hospital Partners, a consortium of Nevada's 13 critical-access hospitals, said the hope is that there will be more money coming, but they are not sure there will be, Patrick reports.

"I think that is a something we're very worried about," said Hall. "We're seeing still sicker patients, patients with different kinds of of needs that typically we've not had to provide care for in rural areas." 

Joe Schindler, vice-president of finance policy and analytics at the Minnesota Hospital Association, added that it would be "disastrous" for hospitals that have depended on money from programs like the Medicare Dependent Hospital Program, which assists smaller hospitals that are heavily dependent on Medicare patients and is set to expire on Sept. 30, to lose this funding.

"This is the worst time probably to pull the rug out on programs that have helped support rural access for many of those hospitals that need those supports," he said.

The report offers several short-term proposals to help shore up rural health systems, largely measures to stabilize payment models and delaying until two years after the federal public health emergency for Covid-19 ends Medicare's scheduled payment reductions of 2%, Patrick reports.

The report also offers what it calls "evidence-based, viable solutions to the health care crisis in rural America" that seek to "stabilize rural health-care systems, strengthen the newly created Rural Emergency Hospital model, ensure an adequate workforce, and broaden access to virtual care in rural America."

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