<p>The U.S. healthcare safety net, a critical lifeline for millions of vulnerable individuals, is facing mounting financial and systemic pressures. Safety-net hospitals (SNHs) have supported the nation’s safety net. In this perspective piece birthed from a Society of General Internal Medicine workshop, we examine SNH closures, why this matters for patients, trainees, and clinicians, and offer actionable steps forward. From 2013 to 2023, over 60% of SNH closures occurred in Medicaid non-expansion states and disproportionately impacted rural areas. The closures impact access and care quality in already marginalized and neighboring communities. SNH closures also compromise medical education by reducing opportunities for trainees to work with underserved populations, potentially attenuating the future healthcare workforce skillset and infrastructure. Addressing these challenges requires collective efforts. Medical trainees have an important role in policy advocacy, community service learning, and health equity research. Physicians must mentor and train future clinicians, research, and lead collaborative efforts to help sustain SNHs. Public officials must collaborate on reforms for existing programs and innovations to ensure sustainable funding and appropriate reimbursements, cost-effective care, shared accountability, and improved health care quality. Together, we can reinforce SNHs and help create a more durable, accessible, and equitable healthcare system for all.</p>

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Lifelines at Risk: Safety-net Hospital Closures in the U.S

  • Camiella-Louisa Sehidou,
  • Melanie Hamilton,
  • Chavon Onumah

摘要

The U.S. healthcare safety net, a critical lifeline for millions of vulnerable individuals, is facing mounting financial and systemic pressures. Safety-net hospitals (SNHs) have supported the nation’s safety net. In this perspective piece birthed from a Society of General Internal Medicine workshop, we examine SNH closures, why this matters for patients, trainees, and clinicians, and offer actionable steps forward. From 2013 to 2023, over 60% of SNH closures occurred in Medicaid non-expansion states and disproportionately impacted rural areas. The closures impact access and care quality in already marginalized and neighboring communities. SNH closures also compromise medical education by reducing opportunities for trainees to work with underserved populations, potentially attenuating the future healthcare workforce skillset and infrastructure. Addressing these challenges requires collective efforts. Medical trainees have an important role in policy advocacy, community service learning, and health equity research. Physicians must mentor and train future clinicians, research, and lead collaborative efforts to help sustain SNHs. Public officials must collaborate on reforms for existing programs and innovations to ensure sustainable funding and appropriate reimbursements, cost-effective care, shared accountability, and improved health care quality. Together, we can reinforce SNHs and help create a more durable, accessible, and equitable healthcare system for all.