Public Health & Infrastructure

Over 400 U.S. Hospitals Face Closure Risk Following Medicaid Cuts

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Over 400 U.S. Hospitals Face Closure Risk Following Medicaid Cuts

A staggering analysis released on Tuesday, March 31, 2026, warns that more than 440 hospitals across the United States are at high risk of shutting their doors or severely gutting services.

The report from the progressive watchdog group Public Citizen ties the impending crisis directly to the Medicaid reductions enacted in President Trump’s 2025 "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" (OBBBA).

The legislation, signed last July, is set to strip roughly $1 trillion from Medicaid funding over the next ten years through stricter eligibility checks and the elimination of various expansion programs.

The findings focus on safety net hospitals where Medicaid and low income assistance programs account for at least 20% of total revenue.

According to the data, these facilities serve approximately 7 million patients across 44 states and the District of Columbia.

While rural access is a major concern, the report surprisingly notes that 60% of the at-risk facilities are located in urban centers, with the heaviest hits projected for California, New York, and Illinois.

Critics of the administration argue that these cuts will disproportionately impact Black and Latino communities, leading to the shuttering of essential maternity and mental health units.

Real world consequences are already surfacing as hospitals in Georgia and California have begun announcing layoffs in anticipation of the funding cliff.

"Safety net hospitals cannot simply absorb a trillion dollar hit without a total collapse in the quality of care," a Public Citizen spokesperson stated during the report's release.

Supporters of the OBBBA have dismissed the report as partisan alarmism, maintaining that the reforms are necessary to curb rampant fraud and make the program sustainable for the future.

Conservative analysts point out that the bill includes $50 billion in targeted support for rural infrastructure and argue that many of the hospitals flagged in the study were financially unstable long before the legislation passed.

They contend the bill correctly prioritizes resources for families and children rather than "able-bodied adults" who refuse to meet the new 2027 work requirements.

The Department of Health and Human Services has not yet issued a formal rebuttal to the specific hospital count, though internal sources suggest the administration views the consolidation of struggling facilities as an inevitable move toward healthcare efficiency.

As the deeper eligibility cuts and work requirements loom on the 2027 horizon, the healthcare industry is bracing for a wave of closures that could redefine medical access for millions of Americans.