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  1. The portion of rural Catholic hospitals remained steady at about 15%. Table 2 demonstrates the changes in ownership and management within health systems. The number of health systems consisting solely of Catholic hospitals decreased from 9 systems with 24 hospitals in 2008 to 4 systems with 12 hospitals in 2017.

  2. Feb 19, 2021 · Consider the surveys of practicing ethicists CHA published in 2009 and 2015. 1 One conclusion drawn from the 2015 survey highlights how, compared to 2009: "The responsibilities of ethicists seem to be changing with rapid changes in the health care delivery system" and such "developments have implications for the adequate preparation of new ethicists. 2 The significance of changes to roles and ...

  3. Descriptive statistics were prepared using cross-sectional matched pairing for 2008 and 2017 data. Of 4,253 hospitals studied, 534 changed ownership or management. More Catholic Church-operated hospitals, regardless of type of ownership (for-profit, not-for-profit, church), became decentralized to a greater degree over the 8-year period and ...

    • Mary E Homan, Kenneth R White
    • 2021
  4. Feb 15, 2021 · February 15, 2021. By JULIE MINDA. The scope, makeup and sponsorship of most Catholic health care ministries have changed dramatically over the last two-plus decades. In light of this, the bishops' conference has updated a document originally published in 1997 on the relationship between diocesan bishops and these ministries in their dioceses.

  5. Oct 6, 2020 · Unfortunately, this report changed the criteria for what defines a Catholic hospital during the past 20 years, which the authors acknowledge in their methodology section. For over 150 years, Catholic health care has always responded where there has been a need for health care.

  6. In the January/February 2021 issue of the Journal of Healthcare Management, Table 2 had an incorrectly printed entry. In the leftmost column, row 4 should have been phrased “Health systems with church not-for-profit, Catholic Church-operated hospitals.” This correction has been made to the online version of the article. REFERENCE

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  8. Feb 23, 2022 · Catholic health care has gone from representing 35 percent of all health care in 1968 to just over 5 percent today, according to research by Hoskins. Governments saw the inefficiencies in funding both a secular and a religious hospital in many communities and chose to shut down some Catholic hospitals to ensure access to reproductive care.

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