US Hospitals Are Hanging by a Thread

As Steward Health Care Systems LLC’s network of hospitals was struggling, it stopped paying some of its vendors. One of those vendors was a supplier of bereavement boxes, the tiny cases used to transport the remains of newborns who don’t survive. The vendor eventually stopped supplying the cases, which meant that grieving parents had to receive their children’s remains in cardboard shipping boxes.

That story, told by a nurse at a congressional hearing looking into Steward’s bankruptcy, has stuck with me as a heartbreaking example of just how severely some of America’s hospitals are struggling — even as the US health care system absorbs shocking sums of money from patients and taxpayers.

The confounding economics of US health care are one reason that in 1960, the country had roughly 9.2 hospital beds per 1,000 people; but today, that ratio is only about 2.3. Hospital cutbacks and closures have expanded America’s medical deserts — places without nearby health care facilities, or where long waiting times or high costs mean local people can’t get timely care. When hospitals close down, the doctors who worked there often retire or relocate, points out Alan Sager, a professor of health law, policy and management at Boston University.

The declining number of hospitals coincides with some depressing declines in health care metrics. In 1980, the US had similar life expectancy rates to its peer countries; but over the last 40 years, we’ve fallen behind. And in the past 20 years, our maternal mortality rates have also turned in the wrong direction.

americans