Examples of Uncompensated care costs in a sentence
Uncompensated care costs are allowable costs in excess of payments made by Nevada Medicaid.
Uncompensated care costs in Cal- ifornia reached $5.1 billion in 2003 (Price Waterhouse Coopers, 2007), and cost-adjusted uncompensated care costs represented 3–7% of operating expenses in 2008, depending on the hospital type (California Health Care Foundation, 2010).
Utah Unsinsured Population Data The Kaiser Family Foundation estimates a total of 393,300 uninsured in Utah from 2010 – 2011 across all age groups.12 Kaiser does not provide data on whether adults have children or not so we chose to utilize our own population data calculations.Additional Assumptions • Uncompensated care costs track across subsets of the general population.• Patients across differing FPL brackets have the same level of healthcare utilization.
Uncompensated care costs and how they change under the different policy options are not reported.Model 1-5 includes an employer assessment on employers with 50 or more employees The assessment is offset dollar for dollar by any employer premium contributions made on behalf of employees.
Uncompensated care costs (UC costs) are the costs hospitals incur providing care for which no payment was received from the patient or insurer.
Uncompensated care costs for the Medicaid State plan rate year were calculated in accordance with Federal Register/Vol.
The Denver region is also home to 51% of Coloradans, and is served by the state’s largest safety net hospital, Denver Health Medical Center.7✔ Uncompensated care costs represent 2.5% of operating expenses in 2022.✔ These uncompensated care trends are expected to continue as more than 36,000 migrants have arrived in Denver during the past year8.
Uncompensated care costs are calculated by adding charity care and bad debt charges together and multiplying by a cost-to-charge ratio.
Uncompensated care costs reported on DSH audits include Medicaid shortfall and hospital unpaid costs of care for uninsured individuals.
Uncompensated care costs translate into “a surcharge of $368 for individual premiums and a surcharge of $1017 for family premiums in 2008.” See Families USA, Hidden Health Tax: Americans Pay a Premium 7 (2009), available at http://familiesusa2.org/assets/pdfs/ hiddenhealth-tax.pdf (cited by both the plaintiffs and the government).