• Center on Health Equity & Access
  • Clinical
  • Health Care Cost
  • Health Care Delivery
  • Insurance
  • Policy
  • Technology
  • Value-Based Care

Hospitals Timing Discharges to Align With Maximum Pay Out

Article

A Wall Street Journal analysis found many long-term hospitals discharge a disproportionate share of patients during the time when hospitals stand to make the most.

Kindred Healthcare

A Inc. hospital in Houston discharged 79-year-old Ronald Beard to a nursing home after 23 days of treatment for complications of knee surgery.

The timing of his release didn’t appear to correspond with any improvement in his condition, according to family members. But it did boost how much money the hospital got.

Kindred collected $35,887.79 from the federal Medicare agency for his stay, according to a billing document, the maximum amount it could earn for treating most patients with Mr Beard’s condition.

If he had left just one day earlier, Kindred would have received only about $20,000 under Medicare rules. If he had stayed longer than the 23 days, the hospital likely wouldn’t have received any additional Medicare money.

Read more at The Wall Street Journal: http://on.wsj.com/1Bn2U6P

Related Videos
Philip Mease, MD
Most employees are unprepared to shop for coverage on their own, underscoring the need for stronger decision tools and consumer protections.
Experts warn that ICHRAs could either stabilize or destabilize the individual market, depending on which workers employers shift into these plans.
Eleanor Perfetto, PhD
Tom Kim, chief medical officer, Sound Long-Term Care Management
Ciara Zachary, PhD, MPH
William Schpero, PhD, MPhil, MPH
Jonathan Strober, MD, Benioff Children's Hospital
Related Content
© 2026 MJH Life Sciences
AJMC®
All rights reserved.