The economic effects of rural hospital closures

TL Malone, AM Planey, LB Bozovich… - Health Services …, 2022 - Wiley Online Library
TL Malone, AM Planey, LB Bozovich, KW Thompson, GM Holmes
Health Services Research, 2022Wiley Online Library
Objective To provide an updated analysis of the economic effects of rural hospital closures.
Study Setting Our study sample was national in scope and consisted of nonmetro counties
from 2001 to 2018. Study Design We used a difference‐in‐differences study design to
estimate the effect of a hospital closure on county income, population, unemployment, and
size of the labor force. Specifically, we compared economic changes over time in nonmetro
counties experiencing a hospital closure to changes in a control group of nonmetro counties …
Objective
To provide an updated analysis of the economic effects of rural hospital closures.
Study Setting
Our study sample was national in scope and consisted of nonmetro counties from 2001 to 2018.
Study Design
We used a difference‐in‐differences study design to estimate the effect of a hospital closure on county income, population, unemployment, and size of the labor force. Specifically, we compared economic changes over time in nonmetro counties experiencing a hospital closure to changes in a control group of nonmetro counties over the same time period. We also leveraged insight from recent research to control for estimation bias due to heterogeneity in the closure effect over time or across groups defined by when closure was experienced.
Data Extraction
Data on (adjusted gross) annual income (in real dollars), annual population size, and monthly unemployment rate and labor force size were sourced from the Internal Revenue Service, Census Bureau, and Bureau of Labor Statistics, respectively. We used data from the North Carolina Rural Health Research Program to identify counties that experienced a hospital closure.
Principal Findings
Of the 1759 nonmetro counties in our study sample, 109 experienced a hospital closure during the study period. Relative to the nonclosure counterfactual, closures significantly decreased labor force size, on average, by 1.4% (95% CI: [−2.1%, −0.8%]). Results also suggest that Prospective Payment System (PPS) hospital closures significantly decreased population size, on average, by 1.1% (95% CI: [−1.7%, −0.5%]), relative to the nonclosure counterfactual.
Conclusions
Our analysis suggests that rural hospital closures often have adverse effects on local economic outcomes. Importantly, the negative economic effects of closure appear to be strongest following Prospective Payment System hospital closures and attenuated when the closed hospital is converted to another type of health care facility, allowing for the continued provision of services other than inpatient care.
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