CQC Nonprofit Hospital Scorecard: California Nonprofit Hospitals Earn a #HospitalFail

By Consumers for Quality Care, on February 13, 2024

CQC Nonprofit Hospital Scorecard: California Nonprofit Hospitals Earn a #HospitalFail

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 13, 2024

Contact: Press@Consumers4QualityCare.org

CQC Nonprofit Hospital Scorecard: California Nonprofit Hospitals Earn a #HospitalFail

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Despite being tax-exempt, nonprofit hospitals across the country are making big money at the expense of their patients. The California Hospital Scorecard was created based on recent findings from the Lown Institute, Axios, PatientsRightsAdvocate.org, and other publications about troubling practices at hospitals in California. These practices are at odds with what the public expects from charitable organizations, especially since California nonprofit hospitals collectively receive billions of dollars in tax breaks each year.

In response to these troubling findings, Consumers for Quality Care (CQC) released the following statement:

“California’s nonprofit hospitals receive billions of dollars in tax breaks each year, but they operate less like charitable organizations and more like big businesses hungry for profit. They’re charging huge mark-ups to their patients and simultaneously not devoting nearly enough resources to providing charity care for those who can’t afford these sky-high bills. That’s not acceptable. As nonprofits, these hospitals have an obligation to put their patients first – before their profits – and they should be held to account when they fail to do so.”

Visit CQC’s Nonprofit Hospital Scorecards here.

 

ABOUT

Consumers for Quality Care (CQC) is a coalition of advocates and former policymakers working to provide a voice for patients in the health care debate as they demand better care. CQC is led by a board of directors that includes the Honorable Donna Christensen, physician and former Member of Congress; Jim Manley, former senior advisor to Senators Edward Kennedy and Harry Reid; Jason Resendez, community advocate and health care strategist; and Mary L. Smith, former CEO of the Indian Health Service.

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