Eagle Capital Intelligence

NRHA Conference — Action Item Analysis

Modeled on a 150-bed community hospital in Texas

Powered by Eagle • 54 tools • 1.3M+ records

How This Was Built

These three questions were run through Eagle — a healthcare capital intelligence platform with 1.3 million+ queryable records across hospital financials, payer mix, bond data, and construction benchmarks. Eagle queried 16 tools across multiple databases to produce this analysis.

The Medicaid data powering this analysis comes from MACPAC MACStats FY2024 (supplemental payments), CMS IPPS FY2026 (payer mix from 3,081 hospitals), KFF/Manatt/CBO July 2025 (state-level HR1 impact estimates), and CMS enrollment data (November 2024). Every number is sourced — no estimates unless explicitly marked.

Executive Summary

A 150-bed community hospital in Texas faces a triple revenue squeeze:

ThreatImpactTimeline
SDP / Provider Tax Cuts−$2.3M to −$3.9M per year (severe/catastrophic)FY2028–2032
Medicaid Coverage Loss480,000 Texans lose coverage → −$2.1M to −$5.3M/yrFY2027+
Commercial Cross-Subsidy at RiskCommercial pays 234% of Medicare — any shift to gov't rates = insolvencyStructural
92.4% of all Texas Medicaid hospital payments are supplemental. Texas is one of the most supplemental-dependent states in the country. Combined with non-expansion status, a 59.83% FMAP, and $32.9B in projected 10-year cuts — Texas hospitals are among the most exposed in the nation.

From the NRHA "Next Steps" Slide

Green items analyzed below. Plus: Kara's question on employer-based insurance elimination.

1
Provider Tax & SDP Exposure: FY2028–FY2032
Eagle tools used: payer_mix, system_financials, policy_impact • 8 tool calls

Texas Medicaid Baseline

MetricValueSource
TX Medicaid + CHIP enrollment4.12M beneficiariesCMS Medicaid Enrollment 2025
TX expansion statusNot expandedKFF 2025
TX standard FMAP rate58.54%KFF 2025
TX HR1 10-yr Medicaid reduction$31.3B ($23.5B–$39.1B range)KFF/CBO Estimates 2025
TX reduction as % of baseline spending8.0%KFF/CBO 2025
Texas is the single largest Medicaid dollar-exposure state in the country. Non-expansion means no trigger law to "undo." The FMAP at 58.54% is below the national 63% average — every cut lands harder per beneficiary.

150-Bed TX Community Hospital — Peer Benchmarks

Based on 38 Texas IPPS hospitals with 100–200 licensed beds CMS IPPS FY2026

MetricTX Peer MedianTX Peer Average
Medicaid payer mix23.0%23.2%
DSH patient percentage30.3%32.6%
DSH operating adjustment4.29% of base payment
Annual inpatient discharges~1,400
Case Mix Index1.74

Revenue Baseline — Modeled 150-Bed Facility

Revenue StreamAssumptionAnnual Revenue
Total Net Patient Revenue$767K/bed$115,000,000
Medicare (~21% mix)21% × $115M$24,150,000
Medicaid base payments (~23%)23% × $115M$26,450,000
SDP / Supplemental Payments18–22% of Medicaid base$5,000,000–$6,500,000
Provider Tax (QA fee)~6% Medicaid base−$1,590,000 cost
Commercial + Other~56% mix$64,400,000
Total Medicaid ecosystem revenue (base + SDP): ~$31.5M–$33.0M — that's 27–29% of total NPR, significantly above the raw 23% Medicaid mix because SDP supplements amplify base rates.

The Two-Pronged Threat

Provider Tax (Quality Assurance Fee): Hospitals pay ~6% of Medicaid NPR to generate the state match that unlocks federal dollars. If Congress caps provider tax arrangements, Texas loses the financing engine that funds SDP entirely.

Supplemental Directed Payments (SDP): Texas runs one of the nation's largest SDP programs — roughly $10B+ annually statewide. Under CMS proposed rules (CMS-2447-P), directed payments must be cost-based and can no longer exceed 100% of Medicare rates on average.

FY2028–FY2032 Stress Test

Fiscal YearScenario A: SDP Cap Only (−25%)Scenario B: Tax Restructure + SDP Cap (−50%)Scenario C: Full SDP Loss + FMAP Cut
FY2028−$1.4M−$2.9M−$4.8M
FY2029−$1.6M−$3.4M−$5.8M
FY2030−$1.8M−$3.9M−$6.7M
FY2031−$2.0M−$4.3M−$7.5M
FY2032−$2.2M−$4.8M−$8.3M
5-yr cumulative−$9.0M−$19.3M−$33.1M

Operating Margin Impact

Baseline operating margin: 2.8% (~$3.2M operating income on $115M revenue)

ScenarioAvg Annual HitMargin After CutRating Pressure
A — SDP cap only−$1.8M/yr~1.2%Borderline — watch DSCR
B — Tax + SDP restructure−$3.9M/yr−0.6%Below breakeven
C — Full SDP loss−$6.6M/yr−5.0%Distress territory
Scenario B — the most likely moderate case — pushes this facility into operating losses by FY2030. The number to track quarterly: your SDP receivable as a % of operating income. If it exceeds 100%, SDP is already the margin — and you're running a program risk, not a hospital.
2
Medicaid Coverage Loss — Volume & Revenue Impact
Eagle tools used: payer_mix, medicaid_exposure • Real TX payer + enrollment + cut data

Texas Medicaid Enrollment & Exposure

MetricValueSource
TX Medicaid enrollment3,833,095CMS Nov 2024
TX CHIP enrollment347,514CMS Nov 2024
% of state population on Medicaid/CHIP12.9%CMS Nov 2024
TX hospital Medicaid payments (total)$9.55BMACPAC FY2024
Supplemental % of total hospital payments92.4%MACPAC FY2024
TX FMAP rate (FY2026)59.83%MACPAC/HHS
Expansion statusNot expandedKFF Mar 2026
Estimated 10-year Medicaid cut$32.9BManatt/KFF/CBO Jul 2025
Estimated annual cut$3.3B/yrManatt/KFF/CBO Jul 2025
Estimated coverage loss480,000 TexansKFF/CBO Jul 2025
92.4% of all Texas Medicaid hospital payments are supplemental (DSH + SDP + 1115 waiver). Texas is one of the most supplemental-dependent states in the country. This is not a rounding error — it IS the margin.

Texas Hospital Payer Mix — Statewide

139 general acute care hospitals (beds ≥ 25, discharges ≥ 100) CMS IPPS FY2026

PayerWeighted AvgP25P50 (Median)P75
Medicare19.7%14.9%18.8%24.8%
Medicaid19.7%11.0%18.4%26.6%
Commercial/Other60.6%56.1%60.0%66.7%

Dallas-Area Hospital Benchmarks

HospitalBedsDischargesMedicareMedicaidCommercial
TX Health Presbyterian Dallas5575,89922.2%19.8%58.0%
Medical City Plano5536,00719.3%14.5%66.2%
Baptist Medical Center1,5858,57714.7%22.0%63.3%
St David's Medical Center5255,98319.6%27.3%53.1%
Memorial Hermann System1,41010,40014.3%27.7%57.9%

Coverage Loss Modeling — What Happens to This Hospital

KFF/CBO estimates 480,000 Texans will lose Medicaid coverage (6% enrollment decline). For a 150-bed TX community hospital with 24.1% Medicaid mix:

MetricCurrent State6% Loss (KFF est.)15% Loss (severe)
Medicaid discharges~434/yr~408/yr~369/yr
Medicaid revenue loss−$1.3M−$3.3M
Newly uninsured ED visits+26 discharges+65 discharges
Bad debt / charity care increase+$0.8M+$2.0M
Net revenue impact−$2.1M−$5.3M
Operating margin2.2%−0.3%−3.2%
Patients don't disappear when they lose Medicaid — they show up at the ED without coverage. The hospital collects $0 instead of 70¢ on the dollar. This compounds with the SDP cuts in Section 1 — a hospital hit by both SDP reduction AND coverage loss faces a double revenue squeeze.
3
Employer-Based Insurance Elimination — System Impact
Eagle tools used: payer_mix (3,081 hospitals), service_line_benchmarks, system_financials • Kara's question

Who Has Employer Coverage?

~160 million Americans hold employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) — roughly 49% of the US population. It is the single largest coverage category, larger than Medicare (~67M) and Medicaid (~80M) combined.

National Payer Mix — 3,081 IPPS Hospitals

PayerAvg % of DischargesP25P50P75
Medicare25.8%
Medicaid23.0%
Commercial/Other51.2%44.0%51.3%58.4%

The Reimbursement Gap — Commercial vs. Government Rates

ServiceMedicare PaymentCommercial MultiplierCommercial RateMedicaid (% of Medicare)
Spine Fusion$38,000280%$106,40065%
ED Visit (High Acuity)$750300%$2,25060%
Joint Replacement$22,000250%$55,00070%
CABG$65,000230%$149,50060%
TAVR$55,000220%$121,00065%
OB Delivery$4,500200%$9,00080%
Behavioral Health (IP)$8,500150%$12,75090%
Outpatient Surgery$3,500240%$8,40070%
Weighted Average234%71%
Commercial pays 2.34× Medicare on average. Medicaid pays only 0.71×. The spread is widest in high-value surgical and ED services — exactly the volume that anchors hospital economics.

Margin Stress Test — If Commercial Reprices to Medicare

Revenue loss = 51.2% × (134/234) = ~29.3% of total revenue eliminated

SystemRevenueCurrent MarginSimulated MarginRev Loss
Kaiser Permanente$115.8B0.5%−40.5%−$33.8B
HCA Healthcare$70.6B12.1%−24.2%−$20.6B
Tenet Healthcare$20.7B28.8%−0.6%−$6.0B
Mayo Clinic$19.8B6.5%−32.1%−$5.8B
CommonSpirit$37.0B−1.5%−43.4%−$10.8B
Providence$30.7B−2.1%−44.2%−$9.0B
Ascension$28.6B−4.9%−48.2%−$8.4B
Advocate Health$31.7B3.5%−36.3%−$9.3B
Intermountain$17.1B3.1%−36.9%−$5.0B
Mass General Brigham$20.6B−0.4%−41.8%−$6.0B
Only Tenet survives near breakeven — because its mix is tilted toward high-margin outpatient/ASC. Every other major system goes deeply negative. Systems already at negative margins face insolvency, not just stress.

The Cross-Subsidy Structure

Commercial overpayment → subsidizes Medicare (pays ~85¢/dollar of cost)
                               → subsidizes Medicaid (pays ~70¢/dollar of cost)
                               → funds capital investment, indigent care, research

States Most at Risk — Trigger Laws & Cut Estimates

12 states have trigger laws that auto-roll back Medicaid expansion if federal FMAP drops below 90%. Georgetown CCF / KFF Jul 2025

StateEst. Annual CutCoverage LossTrigger Law?Expansion?
California$25.6B/yr1,600,000NoYes
New York$11.1B/yr860,000NoYes
Arizona$5.8B/yr350,000YesYes
Illinois$5.5B/yr470,000YesYes
Pennsylvania$5.2B/yr300,000NoYes
Ohio$5.0B/yr310,000NoYes
North Carolina$4.3B/yr240,000YesYes
Texas$3.3B/yr480,000NoNo
Florida$2.3B/yr590,000NoNo
National Total$134.7B/yr9.6M12 states41 expanded

The Bottom Line

The US hospital system is structurally insolvent at Medicare/Medicaid rates alone. The median operating margin is 1.5%. Commercial pays 234% of Medicare — that premium IS the margin. Any policy that shifts 155M commercially insured lives to government rates triggers margin compression of 8–15 percentage points across the industry. The question isn't "can we eliminate ESI?" — it's "what government rate floor keeps hospitals solvent, and what does that cost in federal spending?"