United States’ Nursing Home Finances: Spending, Profitability, and Capital Structure

Author:

Harrington Charlene1ORCID,Mollot Richard2,Braun Robert Tyler3,Williams Dunc4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social & Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA

2. Long Term Care Community Coalition, New York, NY, USA

3. Weill Cornell Medical College, Cornell University, New York, NY, USA

4. Department of Health Care Leadership and Management, College of Health Professions, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA

Abstract

Little is known about nursing home (NH) financial status in the United States even though most NH care is publicly funded. To address this gap, this descriptive study used 2019 Medicare cost reports to examine NH revenues, expenditures, net income, related-party expenses, expense categories, and capital structure. After a cleaning process for all free-standing NHs, a study population of 11,752 NHs was examined. NHs had total net revenues of US$126 billion and a profit of US$730 million (0.58%) in 2019. When US$6.4 billion in disallowed costs and US$3.9 billion in non-cash depreciation expenses were excluded, the profit margin was 8.84 percent. About 77 percent of NHs reported US$11 billion in payments to related-party organizations (9.54% of net revenues). Overall spending for direct care was 66 percent of net revenues, including 27 percent on nursing, in contrast to 34 percent spent on administration, capital, other, and profits. Finally, NHs had long-term debts that outweighed their total available financing. The study shows the value of analyzing cost reports. It indicates the need to ensure greater accuracy and completeness of cost reports, financial transparency, and accountability for government funding, with implications for policy changes to improve rate setting and spending limits.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference48 articles.

1. Office of the Inspector General. Trends in deficiencies at nursing homes show that improvements are needed to ensure the health and safety of residents. HHS Data Brief. April, 2019, 09-18-02010.

2. U.S. Nursing Home Violations of International and Domestic Human Rights Standards

3. Office of the Inspector General. Adverse events in nursing homes: National incidence among Medicare beneficiaries. Washington, DC. OEI-06-11-00370 (Feb. 2014).

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