jnevin
New member
It blows me away how Americans don't understand simple math.
Most hospitals operate on a -1% to 1% operating margin. Let's just call it zero (Tennessee is at -1% right now).
20% of their customers are no-pay/self-pay = 0% cost recovery / 100% loss
40% of their customers are Medicare = 90% cost recovery / 10% loss
They make-up the difference with their private pay insurers. So to get them back to even:
40% x ? = 100*20% + 10%*40%
? = 50%
So they have to get a 50% margin (not mark up... margin) on their cost to cover the no-pays and the Medicare short-pays. Private insurance is their premium customer.
Medicare is going bankrupt even with hundreds of billions of dollars a year in subsidies coming from the private sector -- let alone the taxes that employees and employers pay into the system.
Cliffs Notes: Nationalization would fix US health care about as well as bombing Canada would fix the war in Afghanistan.
Well, some individual hospitals may post those numbers, but if they're part of companies like HCA, etc, their profits are pretty fucking solid. Using HCA as an example, their audits usually show $30-100MM in revenue per facility, per year. Net income is usually $5-10MM. HCA itself is in the billions.
If you're talking smaller private hospitals, I could agree, but those are either being shut down or bought up.