Today's Top 20 Health Finance Articles
  • Advocates seek reparations from HCA over service cuts

    As Santa Clara County, Calif., prepares for its $175 million purchase of Regional Medical Center, advocates are pressing HCA Healthcare for reparations, claiming the hospital's service cuts caused harm to the San Jose community, The Mercury News reported Sept. 4. 
  • Medicare Advantage's 'unrealized' potential

    Health system C-suites have mixed feelings about Medicare Advantage plans. Many are frustrated with the high denial rates and low coverage; some have even cut ties with MA plans.
  • Ohio hospital closes amid financial challenges

    Hicksville, Ohio-based Community Memorial Hospital permanently closed its doors Aug. 31 after temporarily shutting down in May due to financial challenges, Bill Cherry, former CEO of Community Memorial Hospital, confirmed with Becker's. 
  • Transform Your Hospital Operations: A Virtual Summit

    Sponsored
    Nearly 190 health systems are reimagining hospital operations with AI. Learn how, here.
  • 'Perfect storm for cash flow': How this hospital missed payroll

    Big South Fork Medical Center in Oneida, Tenn., saw a 30% drop in cash received in June and July compared to previous months, which then delayed its Aug. 16 payroll, CEO Hal Leftwich emailed to Becker's.
  • The theme of hospital finances in 2024, per Kaufman Hall

    A theme has taken shape as hospitals posted a calendar-year-to-date operating margin index of 4.1% in July, according to Kaufman Hall's July "National Hospital Flash" report.
  • Why 2 health systems don't need to build it to love it

    Sue Perrotty, CEO of West Reading, Pa.-based Tower Health, told Becker's that health systems need to move away from the "we built it, we love it" mindset. 
  • What happens to Steward hospitals that don't receive bids?

    The bankruptcy saga of Dallas-based Steward Health Care is a complex one with no clear end in sight. As the for-profit health system works to offload the remainder of its 31 hospitals, the million-dollar question remains: What happens to the hospitals that don't receive a proper bid?
  • New CFOs help boost financials at 3 systems

    Two Massachusetts health systems trimmed second-quarter operating losses under the leadership of new CFOs, while the new CFO at a Missouri system aims to bolster margins and meet growth goals in fiscal 2025. 
  • Moody's downgrades West Tennessee Healthcare

    Moody's has downgraded Jackson-based West Tennessee Healthcare's rating from "A2" to "A3."
  • Christus affiliate plans to buy Steward Texas hospital

    Christus Health Ark-La-Tex, part of Irving, Texas-based Christus Health, has entered into a binding asset purchase agreement for Dallas-based Steward Health Care's Wadley Regional Medical Center in Texarkana, Texas. 
  • MU Health Care grows operating income to $49.3M under new CFO

    Columbia-based University of Missouri Health Care reported an operating income of $49.3 million (2.8% margin) for the fiscal year ending June 30, improving on the $34.7 million gain (2.1% margin) reported in the previous fiscal year.
  • Rite Aid exits bankruptcy, new CEO named

    Philadelphia-based Rite Aid has completed financial restructuring and successfully emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy after the U.S. drugstore chain filed for protection last October. It will now operate as a private company, according to a Sept. 3 news release. 
  • 6 Steward Massachusetts hospitals secure deals

    Boston Medical Center has reached agreements with Dallas-based Steward Health Care to acquire and run both Brockton-based Good Samaritan Hospital and St. Elizabeth's Medical Center.
  • 8 RCM headlines to know in August

    From two private equity firms striking a deal to acquire R1 RCM to Conifer lining up a contract to provide RCM services to five Alabama hospitals, here are eight revenue cycle management headlines that Becker's reported in August: 
  • Iowa hospital to indefinitely pause labor and delivery services

    MercyOne Newton (Iowa) Medical Center is pausing its labor and delivery services indefinitely, effective after Oct. 15 due to Newton Clinic ending its recruitment of physicians who are dedicated to labor and delivery obstetrics services.
  • From -7.9% to 14.9%: 41 systems ranked by operating margins

    Health systems' second-quarter financial results point to the beginning of a slow and sustained recovery, but challenges including high labor costs and the ongoing disconnect between revenue generation and expense requirements persist. 
  • 5 major health system mergers yet to close

    Healthcare is seeing an uptick in health system mergers and acquisitions post-pandemic, reflecting the industry's ongoing shift towards consolidation to enhance care delivery, expand reach and strengthen financial stability. 
  • Cleveland Clinic, UnityPoint and more: 5 systems back in the black in Q2

    Despite continued high labor costs, inflation and the rising costs of medical equipment and supplies, some nonprofit health systems reversed operating losses from the second quarter of 2023 and are back in the black in the second quarter of this year.
  • 7 health systems operating at a loss in Q2

    While many health systems continue to see sustainable improvements to their financial results, others are still working to improve upon their losses. 
  • A wave of change is coming for healthcare benefits — are hospitals ready?

    Surveys of employers are making one thing clear: Healthcare costs are rising faster than they did before the pandemic, and those costs are being driven by inflation, the increasing use of weight loss medications, and higher overall medical expenses. As employers and insurers grapple with these escalating costs, hospitals will undoubtedly be affected. 

Featured Whitepapers

Featured Webinars

Top 40 Articles from the Past 6 Months