STAT

Some tax-exempt hospitals are lax at providing charity care and accountability

Tax-exempt, nonprofit hospitals don't pay taxes in exchange for providing treatment for those who can't afford it. Some are failing down on the job.

Garnishing wages. Turning over accounts to collection agents. Withholding services until an individual’s ability to pay is proven. These might seem like the practices of a big bank in the news for financial scandals. Instead, these tactics have surfaced at unexpected places: some of the country’s nonprofit, tax-exempt hospitals.

A for leukemia at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston said the hospital refused to admit her before she produced $105,000 in cash. The University of Chicago Medical Center poor, uninsured for debt collection without offering charity care. when NPR and ProPublica on the extent of Mosaic’s collection operation.

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