Hospital systems in Colorado saw improved finances in 2024, but Medicaid cuts are ‘looming threat’

Hospital systems in Colorado stated an improved financial year in after rising costs made for thinner margins the previous year Of the six hospital systems in the Denver area only CommonSpirit Physical condition which owns the Catholic hospitals that formerly were part of Centura Vitality broadcasted it lost money on its operations at the national level Operations include subject care and supportive services such as parking or cafeteria sales but not profits on investments CommonSpirit landed in the red by million or about in the fiscal year that ended in June In the six months from July to December it lost an additional million on operations though investments pulled it into the black The system s financial performance was worse in the second half of than during the same period in the previous year A spokeswoman declined to discuss CommonSpirit s finances The other systems in the area except for Denver Medical which announced it broke even posted profits at the national level AdventHealth HCA Healthcare and Intermountain Healthcare didn t release state-level numbers but mentioned their hospitals in Colorado and surrounding states didn t perform as well as their nationwide profit margins would suggest was a pretty dire financial year and while improved slightly the bulk hospitals aren t yet in a sustainable position announced Tom Rennell senior vice president of financial agenda and facts analytics for the Colorado Hospital Association The average expenses to operate a hospital in Colorado rose about last year continuing a pattern of costs outpacing revenues he mentioned At those levels it s incredibly formidable for insurance reimbursement to keep up he reported Nationwide hospitals averaged a profit margin in according to Becker s Hospital Review Close to two in five hospitals lost money though The outlook remains challenging HCA Healthcare which owns the HealthOne hospitals had the highest profit margin on operations of the systems that operate in Denver coming out ahead by about nationwide HCA ended with a billion profit up from billion in Stephanie Sullivan spokeswoman for HealthOne declared the Colorado hospitals lag behind the rest of HCA financially though she declined to say by how much The state was less profitable than various in keeping Medicaid recipients covered at the end of the COVID- inhabitants medical urgency has relatively high costs and is more aggressive than the greater part in auditing Medicaid payments she explained Although the legislature is working to address a few of these issues the outlook remains challenging Sullivan mentioned AdventHealth wasn t far behind HCA with a roughly profit margin on operations close to twice its margin in It earned about billion on its operations and about million from investments and other sources of income The region that includes Colorado didn t meet its goals in though it still has a solid financial foundation AdventHealth spokeswoman Rachel Robinson announced She attributed the unspecified shortfall to the process of separating from CommonSpirit Wellness when Centura Physical condition broke up in UCHealth runs on a July-to-June fiscal year rather than calendar years so its numbers don t compare exactly to HCA s and AdventHealth s Its financial filings established it earned about million on operations for about a profit margin in the year that ended in June It received another million from investments Both sources of income were up compared to the previous fiscal year UCHealth had a slightly lower margin for the six months from July to December earning about on operations which was essentially unchanged from its profit margin for the second half of A announcement from the system disclosed labor and supply costs stabilized in but uncompensated care continues to increase because people previously covered by Medicaid haven t discovered new insurance Ongoing federal Medicaid uncertainty poses additional financial hurdles for this year and next year UCHealth s report stated Intermountain Healthcare had a million profit on its operations or about a margin It also disclosed almost billion in outlay income The region that includes Colorado Wyoming and Montana lost money however spending about million more than it took in on operations the system reported Still it was an improvement over when it lost about million Although Intermountain Wellbeing generated a positive operating margin the Peaks region is still challenged by costs of providing care remaining higher than the payments received for care the system declared in a message Denver Healthcare benefits from new tax Denver Soundness roughly broke even on operations last year and earned about million in profit with investments included a less than margin for a system with a billion budget It succeeded in reducing how much it spent on short-term staff in but an increase in uncompensated care ate up the bulk of those savings controller Justin Helsper announced Related Articles Denver Wellness unveils plan for million coming from new sales tax this year Colorado legislature ends with an AI fizzle as delay falters further stoking talk of a special session In cash-strapped Colorado lawmakers tap an unorthodox pot of money for priorities But is it too risky Live updates Authorities react to killed AI bill hospitals-pharma fight nears end immigrant protections finalized Live updates Gov Polis signs law requiring citizens schools to set book-removal policies hospital showdown in legislature The system has started receiving funds from a sales tax that Denver voters approved last fall which should bring in about million this year chief financial officer April Audain explained The money will partially offset the uncompensated care the safety-net hospital provides and allow it to expand services such as mental healthcare and addiction recovery she declared The sales tax will offer various increased financial stability though not enough to offset Denver Vitality s losses if the federal regime made essential cuts to Medicaid Audain commented Congressional Republicans have called for billion in cuts to the insurance undertaking over years though they haven t published a plan Hospitals face financial challenges this year including achievable increased costs due to tariffs and an increase in uncompensated care if the economic system takes a downturn Rennell reported But Medicaid cuts are the the bulk worrisome possibility because hospitals would no longer get paid for exigency care they have to provide to people who lose their coverage he stated That is the biggest looming threat Audain announced Sign up for our weekly newsletter to get medical news sent straight to your inbox