Can Nonprofits Save Lives Under Financial Stress? Evidence from the Hospital Industry

65 Pages Posted: 4 Sep 2024

See all articles by Janet Gao

Janet Gao

McDonough School of Business

Tim Liu

University of Utah - David Eccles School of Business

Sara Malik

University of Utah - David Eccles School of Business

Merih Sevilir

Halle Institute for Economic Research; ESMT European School of Management and Technology

Date Written: September 03, 2024

Abstract

We compare the effects of external financing shocks on patient mortality at nonprofit and for-profit hospitals. Using confidential patient-level data, we find that patient mortality increases to a lesser extent at nonprofit hospitals than at for-profit ones facing exogenous, negative shocks to debt capacity. Such an effect is not driven by patient characteristics or their choices of hospitals. It is concentrated among patients without private insurance and patients with higher-risk diagnoses. Potential economic mechanisms include nonprofit hospitals' having deeper cash reserves and greater ability to maintain spending on medical staff and equipment, even at the expense of lower profitability. Overall, our evidence suggests that nonprofit organizations can better serve social interests during financially challenging times.

Keywords: Nonprofits, Hospitals, Financial Constraints, Health Outcomes

Suggested Citation

Gao, Janet and Liu, Tim and Malik, Sara and Sevilir, Merih, Can Nonprofits Save Lives Under Financial Stress? Evidence from the Hospital Industry (September 03, 2024). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4946064 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4946064

Janet Gao

McDonough School of Business ( email )

Washington, DC 20057
United States

Tim Liu (Contact Author)

University of Utah - David Eccles School of Business ( email )

1645 E Campus Center Dr
Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9303
United States

Sara Malik

University of Utah - David Eccles School of Business ( email )

1645 E Campus Center Dr
Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9303
United States

Merih Sevilir

Halle Institute for Economic Research

P.O. Box 11 03 61
Kleine Maerkerstrasse 8
D-06017 Halle, 06108
Germany

ESMT European School of Management and Technology

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