Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New covid wave threatens hospitals

- LAUREN COLEMAN-LOCHNER

A grim reality is setting in across the U.S. hospital sector: A surge in coronaviru­s infections is encroachin­g while most facilities are still recovering from the onset of the pandemic.

The growing number of cases is threatenin­g the very survival of hospitals just when the country needs them most. Hundreds were already in shaky circumstan­ces before the pandemic hit, and the impact of caring for covid patients has put hundreds more in jeopardy.

The new coronaviru­s sidelined profitable elective procedures and protective measures pushed up costs to keep patients and staff safe. Meanwhile, hospitals are losing the privately insured patients they depend on as millions of Americans lose their jobs and employer-sponsored coverage.

“It sort of all comes together as essentiall­y a triple whammy,” Aaron Wesolowski, vice president for policy research, analytics and strategy at the trade group American Hospital Associatio­n, said in an interview.

Though new U.S. virus cases fell last month after a summer spike, covid-19 is again on the rise, especially in the Midwest. Thirty-eight states are now considered hot spots, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, which considers rising cases, test-positivity rates and new daily cases per million population in its analysis.

The hospital associatio­n has estimated the pandemic will cost U.S. hospitals more

than $323 billion through the end of this year. U.S. hospital revenue totaled about $1.1 trillion in 2018, according to the most recent associatio­n data available. The industry group is asking Congress for an additional $100 billion and full forgivenes­s of loans made under Medicare’s accelerate­d payment program, among other requests for relief.

As many as half of hospitals could be losing money by year end, Wesolowski said, citing a report it released in July from Kaufman, Hall and Associates. That’s up from about a third that were operating at a loss ahead of the pandemic.

HOSPITAL COUNT DROPS BY 64

More than three dozen hospitals have already entered bankruptcy this year, adding to a similar number last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. More than a dozen in rural areas have also shut their doors, according to the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina. The associatio­n put the total U.S. hospital count at 6,146 in its most recent report, a decrease of 64 from the previous year.

The financial pain has flowed through to Wall Street. Many of the hospitals that entered bankruptcy this year were part of Quorum Health Corp.’s Chapter 11 filing in April. Quorum’s 24 hospitals and other facilities struggled under the demands of treating coronaviru­s patients. In late June, a judge approved the company’s exit plan, which wiped out shareholde­rs and handed the chain to creditors.

Returns on junk-rated hospital municipal bonds are down nearly 4% this year, recovering after losing 10% in March. As the pandemic set in, Wall Street banks saw a rush of hospitals draw down existing credit lines and were inundated with requests for new or expanded financing. Junk-rated municipal bonds have since rallied and are overall little changed this year as investors seek higher-yielding securities.

RURAL HOSPITALS

Across the U.S., hospitals are struggling to balance their books and in some cases, already shutting their doors.

“Rural hospitals are closing down right and left,” Bert Cunningham, city manager of Bowie, Texas, said in an interview.

Central Hospital of Bowie closed in February and its owners filed for bankruptcy two months later, debilitate­d by years of red ink, Cunningham said. Now the property is up for sale for any use, potentiall­y leaving the 10,000 residents in its service area — many of whom are elderly — 30 miles from the nearest acute-care emergency room, he said.

The hospital’s closing could prompt a broader business exodus from the area. “I’ve had local industry tell us they would consider cutting staff or closing down,” only adding to the area’s uninsured, he said.

LARGER HOSPITALS

The pain, though, spreads far beyond smaller communitie­s to larger facilities treating some of those most at risk for serious illness.

Nearly a thousand miles from Bowie, Loretto Hospital on Chicago’s West Side was also coping with its own challenges. Even before the pandemic, life expectancy in the city’s Austin neighborho­od was just 68.2 years — 20 years shorter than a few miles away downtown, according to Chief Executive Officer George Miller. A full threequart­ers of Loretto’s patients have no insurance or Medicaid, with the latter reimbursin­g Loretto at about 25 to 30 cents on the dollar, Miller said. Medicare, which represents just 12% of patients, pays about 50 cents.

Larger hospitals hit by later waves of cases learned how to isolate covid patients and persuade others to come in for some elective surgery — the more profitable procedures that pay the bills, said Sanjay Saxena, co-leader of The Boston Consulting Group’s Center for U.S. Health Care Reform and Evolution. But disparity between the leading facilities and the rest is getting starker, he said.

Millions of new job losses mean a cut in the number of Americans with private insurance — a critical component for hospitals since federal payments don’t cover the bills. In an April report, Saxena said almost two-thirds of U.S. hospitals face “material financial risk” — compared with 20% pre-pandemic — with options extremely limited for the 25 to 30% at the very bottom.

“There’s not a logical savior for that group,” he said. “No one’s running to go buy hospitals and certainly not those.”

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