Moody’s

High-Deductible Plans Driving Rise in Hospital Bad Debt

Hospital bad debt rose in 2018 after several years of decline, and according to Moody’s, high-deductible health insurance is one of the major drivers of that increase. According to the bond rating agency, non-profit hospitals are seeing growing amounts of bad debt as they struggle, often unsuccessfully, to collect from patients whose high deductibles leave them on the hook for meaningful amounts of care. Kaiser Health News reports that 28 percent of covered workers, nearly half of them working for companies with fewer than 200 employees, now have health plan deductibles of at least $2000.  That proportion of individuals with [...]

2019-12-02T06:00:45-05:00December 2, 2019|hospitals|

Non-Profit Rating Downgrades Exceeded Upgrades in 2017

Moody’s downgraded more non-profit hospital credit ratings than it raised in 2017. The credit-rating company attributed the downgrades to nursing shortages in some markets and rising pharmaceutical and supplies costs. Nearly a third of the downgrades were in just two states:  Ohio and Pennsylvania. Learn more about Moody’s 2017 downgrades and upgrades in this report from Becker’s Hospital Review.

2018-03-12T09:49:18-04:00March 12, 2018|hospitals|
Go to Top