Though it might seem as if hospitals are doing more business than ever because of coronavirus, their primary revenue streams have been shut off by being forced to cancel elective surgeries. Hospitals are losing $1.5 billion to $2 billion monthly — or 40% of their monthly revenue — according to the Hospital Association of Pennsylvania.
“This staggering amount of loss greatly overshadows anything we’ve experienced before,” said Andy Carter, president and CEO of the hospital association.
Though he said there is no reason not to believe that treatment for COVID-19 won’t be reimbursed, those procedures will be less expensive than the more costly elective surgeries hospitals were forced to cancel to make space for COVID patients. And, many COVID patients are insured by Medicaid and Medicare, which reimburse hospitals at lower rates than private payers.
In response to their financial troubles, last week Gov. Tom Wolf announced a $450 million fund to provide emergency loans to the state’s struggling hospitals.
“All these efforts come at a cost,” Wolf said. “We cannot allow any of our hospitals to become bankrupt.”
Last week, the U.S. Department Health and Human Services announced $30 billion of the CARES Act would be given as payments, not loans, to hospitals that need it most. All facilities and providers that received Medicare fee-for-service reimbursements in 2019 are eligible for the funding. Nearly 80% of Einstein’s patients at its North Philadelphia hospital are insured through Medicaid and Medicare.
Carter said that while the hospital association is grateful for the state and federal support, regardless of how much is allocated to Pennsylvania hospitals, “it is almost certainly not even close to enough to address the gaping hole in their finances.”