(Press-News.org) Safety-net hospitals have a common mission to provide care for Medicaid beneficiaries and those who are uninsured, but there’s no universal definition for these hospitals—complicating efforts to allocate funding.
In a new analysis published in JAMA Network Open and led by researchers at the NYU School of Global Public Health, the research team looked at five established definitions for safety-net hospitals and found that different criteria captured varying hospitals and characteristics. As a result, when the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) use one definition to allocate funding, some hospitals are excluded and may not receive the necessary funding to continue providing care.
In an effort to characterize the safety net and inform hospital funding decisions, policymakers and researchers have developed a range of definitions for safety-net hospitals, taking into account factors such as uncompensated care costs, hospital ownership, and patients covered by Medicaid. One such definition, Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments, was developed by CMS to allocate funding to safety-net hospitals. DSH payments are calculated based on the share of care provided to patients receiving social security payments, Medicare coverage, and Medicaid coverage.
In their analysis, the researchers looked at the characteristics of 5,955 U.S. hospitals captured in the 2020 American Hospital Association Annual Survey. They applied five different definitions of safety-net hospitals: those with the most DSH payments, Medicaid inpatient days, Medicaid inpatient days or public hospitals, public hospitals or teaching hospitals, and public hospitals. They also looked at different characteristics of the hospitals, including whether they were rural, for profit or nonprofit, number of beds, whether they were in a Medicaid expansion state, and the clinical complexity of their patients.
The analysis found that each safety-net definition encompassed a considerably different set of hospitals with varying characteristics. For instance, defining safety-net hospitals using only DSH payments accounted for 11.4% of U.S. hospitals and included the fewest rural and public facilities, while defining safety-net hospitals as public or teaching hospitals encompassed more than half (55.2%) of hospitals.
The researchers recommend the adoption of a universal definition or safety-net hospital index to create a more precise tool to identify hospitals for funding.
“This index should incorporate characteristics beyond financial expenditures to include community and service characteristics that can better capture which hospitals care for vulnerable populations,” said Elizabeth McNeill, a doctoral candidate at the NYU School of Global Public Health and the study’s first author.
They also note the risk of allocating funding based on Medicaid care in light of uneven Medicaid coverage across the country. States that have not expanded Medicaid coverage may increase the proportion of uninsured individuals who need care from safety-net hospitals, driving up their costs for uncompensated care.
“Employing a definition for safety-net hospitals based on Medicaid days will underestimate the needs of hospitals in non-expansion states,” said Ji Chang, assistant professor of public health policy and management at NYU School of Global Public Health and the study’s senior author. “A universal definition or index that includes hospital services in addition to Medicaid care would identify more facilities as safety-net hospitals in these states.”
Additional study authors include Diana Silver of NYU School of Global Public Health, Cory Cronin and Berkeley Franz of Ohio University, and Neeraj Puro of Florida Atlantic University. The study was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (R34 DA055228).
About the NYU School of Global Public Health
At the NYU School of Global Public Health (NYU GPH), we are preparing the next generation of public health pioneers with the critical thinking skills, acumen, and entrepreneurial approaches necessary to reinvent the public health paradigm. Devoted to employing a nontraditional, interdisciplinary model, NYU GPH aims to improve health worldwide through a unique blend of global public health studies, research, and practice. The School is located in the heart of New York City and extends to NYU's global network on six continents. Innovation is at the core of our ambitious approach, thinking and teaching. For more, visit: publichealth.nyu.edu
END
What defines a safety-net hospital?
Study examines varied definitions and shared characteristics for hospitals serving low-income and uninsured populations
2023-09-08
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Heatwaves hitting Antarctica too
2023-09-08
The world saw another year full of extreme weather events resulting from climate change in 2022, from intense storms to soaring temperatures and rising sea levels. Antarctica was no exception, according to new research published this week.
In the 33rd annual State of the Climate report, an international assessment of the global climate published Sept. 6 in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, CU Boulder researchers report that the planet’s coldest and driest continent experienced both an unprecedented heatwave and extreme precipitation last year.
“My hope is that the public starts to see both the fragility and complexity of these ...
These worms have rhythm
2023-09-08
There’s a rhythm to developing life. Growing from a tiny cell cluster into an adult organism takes precise timing and control. The right genes must turn on at the right time, for the right duration, and in the correct order. Losing the rhythm can lead to diseases like cancer. So, what keeps every gene on beat?
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) Professor Christopher Hammell has found that in the worm C. elegans, this genetic orchestra has no single conductor. Instead, a quartet of molecules works in concert to time each developmental stage. Hammell says this process shares some similarities with the circadian clocks that control human ...
Sleep-wake therapy gives new hope for teens with depression
2023-09-08
Sleep-Wake Therapy Gives New Hope for Teens with Depression
Promoting healthy sleep in teen night owls brings adolescents’ biology and school demands in alignment.
School systems aren’t built for kids who fall asleep and wake up late, the so-called “night owls,” which may help explain why this group of teens is more prone to depression.
Now, researchers at UC San Francisco have found a way to help these kids adjust to their natural sleep-cycle rhythms while still fulfilling their school responsibilities. The findings are a welcome sign for adolescents with ...
Study explores an underappreciated way warmer temperatures will impact ecosystems: Decomposition
2023-09-08
Our world is changing, and warming temperatures will alter our natural ecosystems. Some of these changes will be straightforward, like animal ranges creeping northward as they strive to maintain their ideal temperatures. But other changes will be more complicated, as warming sets off complex chain reactions that reverberate through these systems.
An important process in ecosystems is the decomposition of plant litter, in which dead plant material is broken down by animals, fungi, and microbes, making its nutrients accessible to the next generation of plants. How quickly this breakdown happens — the decomposition ...
UMBC team of data scientists named a tools competition winner
2023-09-08
Baltimore – A team of four data scientists from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, was named today as one of 32 winners of the Tools Competition, one of the largest education technology (edtech) competitions in the world that awarded more than $4 million to winners this year.
The team was a winner in the DARPA AI Tools for Adult Learning opportunity, which sought artificial intelligence-powered tools to help adults learn complex topics necessary for the current and future national security workforce (e.g., AI engineering ...
Synchrotron studies change the composition of the Earth’s core
2023-09-08
In work published in Science Advances, a team of researchers have determined a new pressure scale, which is critical for understanding the Earth’s composition. Using x-rays from a uniquely powerful spectrometer at RIKEN’s SPring-8 Center they avoided some of the large approximations of previous work, discovering that the previous scale overestimated pressure by more than 20% at 230 gigapascals (2.3 million atmospheres) - a pressure reached in Earth’s core. This is similar to someone running a marathon that they thought was 42 kilometers, but finding they had only really run 34 kilometers. While 20% might seem like a modest correction, it has big implications.
An accurate ...
Applications now open for early-career Latin American science journalists to receive EurekAlert! Fellowships and attend the AAAS Annual Meeting
2023-09-08
The EurekAlert! Fellowships for International Science Reporters are back and now accepting applications from early-career Latin American science journalists. Two fellows will be selected to receive travel funding from EurekAlert! to attend the 2024 AAAS Annual Meeting, taking place February 15-17, 2024 in Denver, Colorado. Learn more about who is eligible and how to apply on our website. The application deadline is October 5, 2023 at 11:59 p.m. US Eastern Time.
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) ...
British sex lives revealed in new study
2023-09-08
A new study published today shows the number of sexual partners we have changes as we age – and there are some surprising results.
Researchers from the University of East Anglia (UEA), in collaboration with King’s College London and University College London, surveyed more than 5,000 people aged 18 years and older during the 2022 mpox (previously known as “monkeypox”) outbreak.
The team wanted to better understand how sexual behaviours change with age, so that mathematical models of sexually transmitted infections can be made more accurate. Key findings included in the paper, published today ...
How trees influence cloud formation
2023-09-08
As part of the international CLOUD project at the nuclear research centre CERN, researchers at PSI have identified so-called sesquiterpenes – gaseous hydrocarbons that are released by plants – as being a major factor in cloud formation. This finding could reduce uncertainties in climate models and help make more accurate predictions. The study has now been published in the journal Science Advances.
According to the latest projections of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the global climate will be 1.5 to 4.4 degrees Celsius warmer than pre-industrial levels by 2100. This figure is based on various scenarios describing how anthropogenic ...
Rice helps lead national quantum computing research efforts
2023-09-08
HOUSTON – (Sept. 8, 2023) A team of Rice University researchers have won a 4-year, $1.2 million grant from the Department of Energy (DOE) to evaluate the strengths and limitations of different physical systems used to build quantum computers.
Nai-Hui Chia, Kaden Hazzard and Kevin Slagle will use theory, numerical simulations and quantum hardware-run algorithms to provide a framework for comparing the viability and computational potential of different approaches to building quantum computers to help achieve near-term advances in quantum computing. Their project is one of six selected by the DOE “to improve our understanding of whether, when and how quantum ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Stronger stress response in monkeys helps them survive
Using infrared heat transfer to modify chemical reactions
Being a ladies' man comes at a price for alpha male baboons
Study shows anti-clotting drug reduced bleeding events in patients with atrial fibrillation
UMaine-led team develops more holistic way to monitor lobster industry
Antiviral protein causes genetic changes implicated in Huntington’s disease progression
SwRI-led PUNCH spacecraft make final pit stop before launch
Claims for the world’s deepest earthquake challenged by new analysis
MSU study finds children of color experience more variability in sleep times
Pregnancy may increase risk of mental illness in people with MS
Multiple sclerosis linked to higher risk of mental illness during and after pregnancy
Beyond ChatGPT: WVU researchers to study use and ethics of artificial intelligence across disciplines
Ultrasensitive test detects, serially monitors intact virus levels in patients with COVID-19
mRNA-activated blood clots could cushion the blow of osteoarthritis
Three rockets will ignite Poker Flat’s 2025 launch season
Jared M. Kutzin, DNP, MS, MPH, RN, named President of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare
PET probe images inflammation with high sensitivity and selectivity
Epilepsy patient samples offer unprecedented insights on brain ‘brakes’ linked to disorders
Your stroke risk might be higher if your parents divorced during your childhood
Life satisfaction measurement tool provides robust information across nations, genders, ages, languages
Adult children of divorced parents at higher risk of stroke
Anti-climate action groups tend to arise in countries with stronger climate change efforts
Some coral "walk" towards blue or white light, using rolling, sliding or pulsing movements to migrate, per experiments with free-living mushroom coral Cycloseris cyclolites
Discovery of the significance of birth in the maintenance of quiescent neural stem cells
Severe weather and major power outages increasingly coincide across the US
Bioluminescent cell imaging gets a glow-up
Float like a jellyfish: New coral mobility mechanisms uncovered
Severe weather and major power outages increasingly coincide across the U.S.
Who to vaccinate first? Penn engineers answer a life-or-death question with network theory
Research shows PTSD, anxiety may affect reproductive health of women firefighters
[Press-News.org] What defines a safety-net hospital?Study examines varied definitions and shared characteristics for hospitals serving low-income and uninsured populations