Connecticut Post

Hospitals seek $450M in state relief

- By Jenna Carlesso

With the state recording fewer new coronaviru­s cases and people returning to restaurant­s and stores, residents in need of routine or urgent medical care have also ventured back into hospitals.

After months of sluggish emergency room traffic and no elective surgeries, Connecticu­t’s hospitals have seen a rise in demand for those services. Outpatient procedures and primary care appointmen­ts have resumed, even if some patients are still keeping their distance.

But hospitals, pummeled financiall­y by months of added expenses and a steep drop in revenue, haven’t recovered. Many are still projecting sizable losses for the end of their fiscal year in September.

Federal stimulus money and belt tightening measures have not balanced the books, and hospital leaders are now looking to the state for support. They have asked Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion to contribute $450 million.

“We are in discussion­s with the administra­tion, and we’re hopeful that our ongoing talks regarding the need for state relief will be resolved in the near future,” said Mark Schaefer, vice president of system innovation and financing for the Connecticu­t Hospital Associatio­n. “We’re looking for the maximum assistance the state can provide to the hospitals to get them back to a place where they can be relied upon to respond swiftly and successful­ly like they did in March.”

Max Reiss, a spokesman for

Lamont, did not comment on the request by CHA but confirmed state officials are in talks with hospital leaders.

“The state must ensure it has adequate resources to pay for personal protective equipment, to provide resources for our local school systems, and to pay for adequate testing capacity,” he said. “Our hospitals have been an incredible partner throughout this public health emergency and we will continue to work with them to address their needs.”

Next month, the administra­tion expects to finish divvying up Connecticu­t’s $1.38 billion share of the Coronaviru­s Relief Fund — Congress’ chief vehicle to provide direct pandemic relief to states and large cities. But with more than $760 million already committed — and outstandin­g needs far greater than the $620 million yet to be assigned — state officials could be facing hard choices unless more relief comes soon from Washington.

State leaders have not provided an estimate for how much of the relief funds will be directed to hospitals, but Melissa McCaw, Lamont’s budget director, said the facilities will be a major beneficiar­y of the remaining $620 million.

One way to ensure that state money gets to all of the hospitals in need would be to create a stabilizat­ion fund, “from which dollars could be dispersed or allocated to individual hospitals proportion­ate to their need,” Schaefer said.

The needs vary. Some health systems have recorded losses of $6 million a month while other, larger hospitals have lost as much as $40 million a month.

Statewide, hospitals are expected to be short as much as $1.4 billion this fiscal year, despite receiving $625 million in federal relief so far.

To stay afloat, some have sought and received up to six months of advanced Medicare payments that must be returned starting in August. That makes the request for state assistance urgent, Schaefer said.

He estimated that hospitals collective­ly owed more than $1 billion for their advanced Medicare payments. If they don’t pay it back within a certain time period, interest will accrue.

“We’re hoping we can conclude these discussion­s in relatively short order,” Schaefer said. “If that money doesn’t get paid back timely, there are interest penalties. So that’s something of great concern to the hospitals.”

Patients return, but fiscal troubles persist

As the COVID-19 crisis escalated this spring, hospitals canceled elective surgeries, and trips to physicians’ offices and emergency department­s plunged as people fearful of exposure stayed away.

That meant millions or tens of millions of dollars in lost revenue each month, along with added expenses for protective gear, staffing and infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts to keep staff and patients safe.

In May and June, as the state lifted certain restrictio­ns and businesses began to reopen, residents who had delayed medical care returned to hospitals and doctors’ offices.

The return rates differ from hospital to hospital, but most reported a significan­t increase in patients coming back for services.

In the Yale New Haven Health system, which includes five hospitals, emergency room visits dropped to about 40 percent of their normal volume and elective surgeries ceased at the height of the pandemic. Today, ER volume is 60 percent to 80 percent of what it was pre-pandemic, depending on the facility, said Christophe­r O’Connor, executive vice president and chief operating officer. Surgeries — elective and emergent — are about 80 percent of where they were before coronaviru­s spread in the state, and inpatient services are at 90 percent, he said.

“It’s climbing back, but it’s still not where it was before,” O’Connor said. “It’s continuing to build on a week-over-week basis.”

In March and April, the Yale New Haven system lost $140 million each month. The losses have slowed recently – to $60 million in June, O’Connor said. And the system has received about $200 million in federal stimulus money.

But officials still expect to come up short in September.

“We were averaging about a 3 ½ percent margin when we closed the month of February and were on pace to have a 4 percent margin for the year,” O’Connor said. “Now, we’re likely not going to have a margin, and we will likely lose money. That’s going have a significan­t toll.”

He did not reveal an end-ofyear estimate for the losses.

At Bristol Hospital, officials expect to be short about $16 million when the fiscal year ends, even after receiving $4.2 million in federal aid.

During the spring, emergency room visits were down by 40 percent and elective surgeries were canceled. The hospital has rebounded somewhat since then — emergency department visits are down only 15 percent and elective procedures are at 85 percent of the typical volume.

But the hospital is still struggling. Administra­tors furloughed more than 100 employees and reduced hours for about 200 more. Some of those furloughs have turned into layoffs, though officials did not say how many people were out of a job.

President and CEO Kurt Barwis is hoping for more help from the federal government and the state.

“The hospitals that got everything ready — spent all their time and money to prepare — but didn’t see the influx of patients and, accordingl­y, didn’t get ‘hotspot’ money from the federal government, basically got crushed in this,” he said. “So hopefully there’s going to be another round of federal support because come Sept. 30, I’m looking at my debt covenants and I know I’m not going to make one of those.”

As of April, hospitals statewide had spent about $200 million above their planned expenses to cover the cost of protective gear, infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts, additional staffing and other resources related to the pandemic. More recent figures on those expenses were not available.

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