Environmental Health Investments: A Minimal Part of Nonprofit Hospital Community-Building Expenses.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Cory E Cronin, Kevin Chen, Catherine Chen, Cheyenne Fenstemaker, Elizabeth Cerceo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Context: Environmental impacts on human health are an urgent concern, requiring greater focus and action from health care organizations. Nonprofit hospitals can address community needs through investing in environmental improvement (EI) projects aimed at reducing harm to the community from environmental hazards. These expenditures provide a useful model for understanding how hospitals can respond to environmental influences on health, but national patterns of EI expenditures are under-researched.

Objective: To assess nationwide trends in nonprofit hospital EI spending from 2010 to 2021.

Design: Observational study using Internal Revenue Service tax data.

Setting: US nonprofit hospitals.

Main outcomes and measures: We assessed associations between reported EI spending and hospital organization and community characteristics (hospital revenue (quintiles); bed size (<50, 50-199, 200-399, 400 +); participation in group reporting (yes/no); teaching affiliation (yes/no); rurality status; geographic region (Northeast, Midwest, West, and South), and county poverty (quartile).

Results: There were 36 093 nonprofit hospital-years included in our analysis. 10.4% of hospitals reported EI spending. EI spending was positively associated with higher revenue and being in the Midwest region and negatively associated with area poverty. The years 2020 and 2021 were significantly associated with a lower likelihood of spending relative to 2010. 40% of hospitals included utilized group reporting. Only 6% of independently reporting hospitals reported EI spending. Among hospital organizations with any reported community-building expenses, the percentage of their total operating budget dedicated to EI averaged 0.002% each year (0%-1.52%).

Conclusions: Though EI investments are small relative to community-building spending, the characteristics of hospitals reporting these investments provide insight into EI trends over time and which hospitals are conducting these efforts. Future research should consider the specific gaps to stimulating EI, what environmental needs hospitals are equipped to fill, and their relevance to broader environmental health policies and initiatives.

环境健康投资:非营利性医院社区建设费用的最小部分。
背景:环境对人类健康的影响是一个紧迫的问题,需要卫生保健组织更加重视和采取行动。非营利性医院可以通过投资环境改善(EI)项目来满足社区需求,这些项目旨在减少环境危害对社区的危害。这些支出为了解医院如何应对环境对健康的影响提供了一个有用的模型,但对国家环境投资支出模式的研究不足。目的:评估2010 - 2021年全国非营利性医院EI支出趋势。设计:使用美国国税局税收数据的观察性研究。背景:美国非营利性医院。主要结果和措施:我们评估了报告的EI支出与医院组织和社区特征(医院收入(五分位数);结果:我们分析了36093个非营利性医院年。10.4%的医院报告了EI支出。EI支出与较高的收入和中西部地区呈正相关,与地区贫困负相关。与2010年相比,2020年和2021年的支出可能性明显降低。40%的医院采用了分组报告。只有6%的独立报告医院报告了EI支出。在报告有社区建设费用的医院组织中,EI占其总运营预算的百分比平均每年为0.002%(0%-1.52%)。结论:虽然EI投资相对于社区建设支出较小,但报告这些投资的医院的特征提供了对EI随时间变化趋势的洞察,以及哪些医院正在进行这些努力。未来的研究应考虑刺激EI的具体差距,医院有哪些环境需求可以填补,以及它们与更广泛的环境卫生政策和举措的相关性。
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来源期刊
Journal of Public Health Management and Practice
Journal of Public Health Management and Practice PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
9.10%
发文量
287
期刊介绍: Journal of Public Health Management and Practice publishes articles which focus on evidence based public health practice and research. The journal is a bi-monthly peer-reviewed publication guided by a multidisciplinary editorial board of administrators, practitioners and scientists. Journal of Public Health Management and Practice publishes in a wide range of population health topics including research to practice; emergency preparedness; bioterrorism; infectious disease surveillance; environmental health; community health assessment, chronic disease prevention and health promotion, and academic-practice linkages.
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