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Kaiser Permanente commits up to $10 million to Denver Health

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Funding comes as Denver Health provided $120M in uncompensated care in 2022, a doubling since 2020

For more than 160 years, Denver Health has played a critical role as Denver’s core safety-net hospital, providing care regardless of a patient’s ability to pay. But recently, the health system has experienced unprecedented financial challenges, largely due to the dramatic increase in uninsured patients, uncompensated care and higher costs.

Kaiser Permanente and Denver Health jointly announced a new $10 million commitment from Kaiser Permanente* to assist Denver Health with vital health care services for the community, including continued access to primary and specialty care for those who do not have the means to pay.

Kaiser Permanente will fund a $5 million grant to address the immediate need. Another $5 million will be available as a matching donation—an incentive for local organizations, members of the business community, health care industry and others—to step up to help Denver Health. When the match is complete, this gift from Kaiser Permanente will be the single largest gift to Denver Health.

“We are immensely grateful to Kaiser Permanente for their commitment to serving Colorado with this generous financial support,” said Denver Health and Hospital Authority CEO Donna Lynne, DrPH. “None of us can imagine a city or a state without Denver Health. This community relies on us, and we need a coordinated community-wide effort to ensure we are sustainable now and into the future.”

Kaiser Permanente is the state’s largest nonprofit health plan and this support for Denver Health is part of the organization’s mission to improve the health of the Colorado community.

Health care organizations like Denver Health, community-funded clinics, rural health clinics, free clinics, school-based health centers and federally qualified health centers are vital parts of Colorado’s health care safety net, providing quality care for the state’s most under-resourced populations.

“Denver Health plays an essential role in taking care of patients in our state with significant medical needs,” said Mike Ramseier, president of Kaiser Permanente in Colorado.

“A strong health care safety net benefits our entire community. It is imperative for us to come together now to support Denver Health.”

As a comprehensive health care system, Denver Health cares for nearly 30 percent of Denver’s population each year, and it provides the highest percentage of care to uninsured patients of any hospital in Metro Denver. Since its founding, Denver Health has provided billions of dollars in uncompen- sated care. On the heels of the pandemic, many people delayed care, and Denver Health has seen patients sicker than they otherwise would have been coming to their emergency department, as well as other clinical settings, which has been driving increased health care costs.

Denver Health’s uncompensated care has doubled from an annual average of $60 million in 2020 to $120 million in 2022. Like many safety-net hospitals across the country, Denver Health also experienced inflationary costs for staff, medical equipment and drugs. On average, U.S. hospitals’ costs have risen 17.5 percent since 2019. Many of those costs disproportionally hit safety-net hospitals.

“Denver Health provides broad, vital and responsive access to quality care for Medicaid members, the uninsured, and many other Coloradans,” said Kim Bimestefer, executive director of the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing.

“I applaud the leadership of health care organizations who are stepping up financially to support Denver Health, and I encourage communities and hospitals across the greater Denver area to do the same in support of Denver Health as a pillar of our state’s healthcare system.”

Furthermore, Denver Health addresses critical health inequities for low-income communities, communities of color, immigrants, refugees and people experiencing homelessness. The additional financial support helps ensure that underserved communities have access to a strong safety net that equitably meets patients’ needs and improves health outcomes. Kaiser Permanente is committed to providing Coloradans access to high-quality, affordable health care. Supporting the health care safety net and promoting health equity are part of that commitment.

Kaiser Permanente has invested significantly in supporting charity care throughout its history. This includes direct financial assistance for those who receive care in the Kaiser Permanente system and are unable to pay, as well as investments like this one in the broader health care safety net. In 2022, Kaiser Permanente invested $100 million in community support, partnerships, programs, and charitable care and coverage to improve the health and equity of all Coloradans. This snapshot highlights some of Kaiser Permanente’s work in 2021 to address the root causes of health, such as economic opportunity, affordable housing, safe and supportive schools, and a healthy environment.

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