
Community Service Society: How to Fix NY's Hospital Indigent Care Program
Liz Krueger
February 13, 2012
The Community Service Society just published an alarming report detailing hospitals’ widespread failure to comply with a charity care law that went into effect in 2007. The law addressed the need for financial assistance to reduce the hospital bills of low-income New Yorkers who are uninsured or underinsured. According to The New York Times:
“The entire system is corrupted, and it isn’t working for patients,” said Elisabeth R. Benjamin, vice president of health initiatives at the Community Service Society of New York, a nonprofit antipoverty group, which is releasing the two-year study on Monday.
The state’s Department of Health acknowledges systemic problems, including the need for better reporting and enforcement, a spokesman, Michael Moran, said. A group of patient advocates and hospital administrators is being convened to develop a better system, he said, and the department is engaged in “a comprehensive data integrity project that will include the retention of an outside auditor.”
Senator Krueger has written to Commissioner Nirav Shah of the Department of Health, inquiring into steps the department is taking to increase accountability and advise patients and the public of their rights. Read the full Community Service Society report below:
Share this Article or Press Release
Newsroom
Go to Newsroom‘¡Sí se puede!’ is rallying cry for housing activists
December 12, 2008
No Senate Leader, But Transition Talks Underway
December 12, 2008
Blacklist Blues: Landlords Use Dodgy Database to Fend off Feisty Tenants
December 12, 2008
Smith: Deal off with dissident NY Senate Democrats
December 10, 2008