
01.03.2006
Hospital
Profits Near $1 Billion
Industry Still Refuses to Set Limit on a Nurses’ Patient Load
[View
Financials]
At
a time when patient safety is being endangered by RN understaffing,
the state’s hospitals have posted astounding profits totaling
nearly $1 billion for the past fiscal year.
According
to the numbers posted last week by Massachusetts’ Department
of Healthcare Finance and Policy,1 total hospital profits
surpassed $823 million for fiscal year 2005, which represents a
58 percent increase over figures for 2004.
The
nearly $1 billion profit margin comes at a time when health reform
proposals being debated on Beacon Hill could land the industry another
$300 million. According to the latest Department of Public Health
Report, while the hospital industry bottom line increases, the quality
and safety of patient care has shown a marked decline. The latest
DPH report on health care quality issued last summer found that
patient injuries, patient complaints and medication errors have
increased by an alarming 60% over the last five years.
“These
figures shatter the hospital industry’s claims that they cannot
provide a safe standard of RN staffing, as called for in pending
legislation to establish safe staffing levels in our hospitals,”
said Beth Piknick, RN, President of the Massachusetts Nurses Association,
one of more than 100 organizations supporting H. 2663. “This
year’s profits could pay for the staffing needed to protect
patients many times over. The time has come for the hospital industry
to put patients ahead of profits.”
Note:
Accountants refer to these dollars as a hospital’s “surplus,”
rather than its “profit”- because almost all hospitals
in the state are “non-profit, charitable” institutions.
Go figure. Moreover, the dollars reflected in these figures released
last week represent only the hospitals’ surpluses. The total
additional dollar profit generated by healthcare systems, such as
mammoth Partners Healthcare System, Inc., is not reflected in these
whopping numbers.
For
example, UMass Memorial Healthcare System separately reported a
huge figure of just under $80 million dollars in hospital surplus,
and an additional $14 million-plus in system surplus, for a total
of $94.3 million for the year ended September 30, 2005. That profit
comes on top of a $129 million expansion and renovation underway
of the UMass university emergency department and trauma center.
The 2005 surplus would have topped $100 million but auditors tucked
an extra $13.5 ml away in a category called supplemental Medicaid
payments.
UMass
Hospital officials comment that the surplus delights them and far
exceeds their expectations.2
[View
Financials]
1FY05
Q4 Acute Hospital Financial Report and Hospital-specific Fact Sheets
2Bob
Kievra, “UMass Memorial Posts Surplus” Worcester
Telegram & Gazette, December 22, 2005
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