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GEORGIA’S 340B HOSPITALS AND CLINIC SYSTEMS ARE FAILING PATIENTS

Georgia’s 340B hospitals and clinics are supposed to help people. Instead, they’re exploiting taxpayer funds and failing audits while hardworking Georgians are left in the dark.

Charity Care Falls While Profits Soar.

Georgia health systems spend, on average, just 4.92% of their operating budgets on charity care. 

One major Georgia hospital generated over $7.7 billion in 2024 but only provided 5.4% of total expenses in charity care.

Another Atlanta health system’s operating budget was $1.5 billion while delivering just 3.19% in charity care.

Georgia clinics raked in nearly $385 million of taxpayer dollars in 2024.

Billions of Dollars. Zero Accountability. Patients Pay the Price.

An in-depth report found that a Georgia hospital with more than $850 million in annual revenue provided inadequate care to low-income patients, leading to severe health outcomes.

Georgia’s 340B program was meant to serve patients, not pad hospital and clinic profits. Instead, charity care lags and transparency is ignored.

STOP HOSPITALS’ 340B ABUSE AND PROTECT HARDWORKING GEORGIANS.

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Community Action for Responsible Hospitals (CARH) is a non-profit organization of patient-focused stakeholders including labor unions, faith leaders, healthcare providers, consumer advocates, and public interest groups.

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