Plus, ED volumes surge
View in browser

Wednesday, May 6, 2025

hfma_logo_white

Presented by

Strata_Logo_rev
FastFinance_topper-1
FastFinance_topper_presented by-1
FastFinance_topper-1
RichDaly_headshot

Rich Daly, Senior Editor

RichDaly_headshot

Rich Daly, Senior Editor

Supreme Court allows $1.5 billion DSH loss

The Supreme Court greenlit continued HHS use of a payment formula for Medicare disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments, which has cost hospitals $1.5 billion annually.

 

The decision allows continuation of a policy that counts patients in the numerator of the Medicare fraction only if they receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI) cash benefits during the month of a hospitalization.

 

Per estimates, HHS’s interpretation cuts DSH payments by 15%, or roughly $1.5 billion annually, when extrapolated nationwide.

READ ANALYSIS

What’s driving the ED volume surge?

Hospital emergency department (ED) volumes have jumped 40% since 2020, according to a recent Moody’s Ratings report.

 

Other data found:

  • 15% increase in year-to-date 2025 ED visits per calendar day compared to YTD 2022
  • 20% increase in ED volumes from 2000 to 2018
  • 45.3% of ED visits were covered by Medicaid in 2021

Some states and hospitals have blamed the ED surge on a recent immigration wave and post-COVID Medicaid eligibility redeterminations. But an ED researcher credited the surge to a sicker, older population that needs the intensive services only EDs can provide.

Emergency department surge

ED volumes have increased 40% in a recent five-year span among a group of hospitals tracked by Moody’s Rating Services.

EDSurge_FF050725_chart-1

Source: Moody's Ratings, Not-forProfit and Public Healthcare - US Preliminary medians - Revenue growth drives improved profitability, April 3, 2025

READ ANALYSIS

Where commercial patients struggle most with affordable care

People covered through employer-sponsored insurance in rural states face the biggest insurance costs, according to a recent analysis.

 

However, comparing 2023 employee premium contributions and deductibles relative to state-wide median income revealed some southern states had the worst affordability.

 

The states with the least affordable ESI family coverage included:

  • Louisiana (14.9% of income)
  • Oklahoma (13.5%)
  • New Mexico (13.3%)
  • Alabama (12.9%)
  • Florida (12.6%)

Residents of 22 states spent more than 10% of their incomes on ESI premium contributions and deductibles for family coverage together in 2023.

 

Thanks to the recent inflation-driven increase in wages, the national average of the share of income consumed by ESI premiums and deductibles decreased from 10.8% in 2020 to 10.1% in 2023.

Where job-based insurance costs are highest

The total combined average of premium and deductibles for family coverage enrollees in employer sponsored insurance viewed widely by state.

JobBasedInsuranceCost_FF050725 chart

Source: Commonwealth Fund, How Affordable Is Job-Based Health Coverage for Workers?, March 13, 2025

READ ANALYSIS

POLICY TRACKER

To help readers keep track of the wave of healthcare policy initiatives from the Trump administration and Congress, here is a timeline of federal actions and HFMA’s related coverage.

READ TIMELINE

NumberToKnow_FF050725

NUMBER TO KNOW

The median loss per employed physician at hospital-owned medical practices is just under $250,000. Read more.

Crucial Dates

 

LEGISLATIVE

May 9: Deadline for specific proposed healthcare cuts under the budget reconciliation process from committees of jurisdiction

 

REGULATORY

June 1: Initial price offers due from CMS for drugs subject to Medicare price negotiations

 

June 15: Requirement to remove healthcare bills from credit reports effective (postponed from March 15)

 

INDUSTRY

June 22-25: HFMA Annual Conference

 

July 20-22: AHA Leadership Summit

HFMA-ad-600_5_2_25

LinkedIn
Facebook
X
YouTube
footerlogo

HFMA

2001 Butterfield Rd, Ste 1500

Downers Grove, IL,  60515

hfma.org | 800-252-4362

Unsubscribe or Manage Preferences

Unsubscribe