Colorado Senate Approves Hospital Charity Care Bill

The Colorado Senate has approved SB134, which would require hospitals to inform all uninsured patients about their financial assistance programs and to discount hospital charges to anyone that makes less than 250 percent of the federal poverty level, according to a Denver Business Journal report.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Irene Aguilar, MD, (D-Denver), would also prohibit hospitals from billing patients more than the hospital's cost of providing care. Hospitals must estimate the cost of providing care by multiplying the hospital's usual total charges for a service by its overall cost-to-charge ratio.


Previously, the bill (pdf) would have required hospitals to discount charges to any patient that has a family income of no more than 400 percent of the FPL. Although hospital charity care guidelines are required on Form 990s and within the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Sen. Aguilar said the goal of the bill is to eliminate completely the chance a patient could be forced into bankruptcy from excessive hospital costs.

SB134 passed in a 28 to 6 vote in the Senate, and it now heads to the House, according to the report.

More Articles on Hospital Charity Care:

The 4 Dimensions of Hospital Accountability

Judge: County Has No Obligation to Fund Carolinas HealthCare's Charity Care

Illinois to Resume Reviews of Non-Profit Hospitals' Tax-Exempt Statuses

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