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Rural nonprofit hospital community benefit and financial assistance spending: A call for greater reporting transparency

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posted on 2025-02-26, 04:25 authored by Hannah Macdougall, Melissa Latcham, Erica Eliason
AbstractPurposeUS nonprofit hospitals must provide community benefits including financial assistance to be tax‐exempt. Rural residents particularly benefit from financial assistance because they have higher medical debt on average. The Internal Revenue Service allows nonprofit hospitals that are members of health systems to report expenditures for their entire system (group returns) rather than for individual hospitals. Our study examined how (if at all) rural nonprofit hospitals filing group returns are different than those filing individual returns.MethodsWe used 2021 data extracted from Community Benefit Insight and the American Hospital Association for 100 rural nonprofit hospitals in Wisconsin and Minnesota. We conducted bivariate analyses examining differences in mean total community benefit spending and mean financial assistance spending as a percentage of total operating expenses for hospitals filing individual versus group returns. We conducted multivariable regression models examining the association of filing group returns and individual returns with community benefit spending and financial assistance spending.FindingsBivariate analysis revealed significant differences between group return hospitals and individual return hospitals in spending on community benefits (5.81% vs. 9.49%, respectively) and on financial assistance (0.36% vs. 0.71% respectively). Multivariable regression demonstrated filing group returns is significantly negatively associated with community benefit expenditures (β = –2.90, p < 0.05) and financial assistance expenditures (β = –0.31, p < 0.01).ConclusionIn our sample, filing group returns was associated with less spending on community benefits and financial assistance. To understand this finding, researchers need data on individual hospital spending to increase transparency and accountability.

History

Journal

Journal of Rural Health

Volume

41

Season

Winter

Article number

e12914

Pagination

1-5

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0890-765X

eISSN

1748-0361

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Wiley