Charity Care in Ophthalmology, 2024.

Am J Ophthalmol

From the Department of Ophthalmology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine (D.J.B., S.S.O., H.H.), Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Published: June 2024

Purpose: To review changes in the provision of charity eye care in the past 50 years with hypothesized resulting effects on surgical training and patient outcomes.

Design: Perspective.

Methods: Case report, comparison of experience in community and training program settings, and selected literature review.

Results: The population to which charity care applies has shrunk as broader insurance coverage has been legislated, but in 2023 remains at approximately 7.3% of the US population. In areas with ophthalmology training programs, house staff supervised by faculty provide most of the charity care. In areas without training programs, a shrinking pool of willing private practitioners provides charity care. Because there is no organized financial support behind provision of charity, nonanecdotal data needed to assess the problem and guide decision making are lacking.

Conclusions: Charity eye care in ophthalmology in 2024 is a patchwork of transient, local efforts that have a few common themes: absent material basis for sustainability, a narrowing base of support by clinicians, transfer of care to training programs, and financial vetting of applicants by nonclinicians. Unless universal health care legislation passes, which would eliminate the issue, suggestions for improvement include broader voluntary participation by private practice ophthalmologists in charity eye care, allocation of charity care spending by nonprofit hospitals to support this effort, and clinician-determined criteria for provision of charitable surgery supported by involved hospital systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajo.2024.02.002DOI Listing

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