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Do Nonprofit Hospitals Give Enough?

Skip O'Rourke
/
Tampa Bay Times

How much charity care is enough for a hospital to earn its nonprofit, tax-exempt status? Apparently there is no rule about that, the Tampa Bay Times reports. 

The IRS requires nonprofit hospitals to provide, in detail, the “community benefits” they provide. But the IRS doesn’t have specific targets that nonprofits have to hit when it comes to providing uncompensated care.

In Tampa Bay, the average amount of expenses that went to treatment for the poor and uninsured was 4 percent. St. Anthony’s in St. Petersburg had the largest charity care ratio in the area at 6 percent.

A health economics expert says the goal for nonprofits’ charity spending should match the rate of uninsured, which in Florida would be about 20 percent.

Lottie Watts was our Florida Matters producer from 2012 to 2016. She also covers health and health policy for WUSF's Health News Florida .
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