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![Funding shortfall of more than $1.3 billion could push safety-net hospitals to financial brink](https://healthpolicy.ucla.edu/sites/default/files/styles/two_column_card/public/blog_placeholder.png.webp?itok=LU25HGu2)
Press Releases
California will fare better than other states but will still feel pain Public hospitals in California that serve the poorest patients could face a $1.54 billion funding shortfall in 2019, when federal funding cuts go into effect. Those cuts, along with health-care cost inflation, could jeopardize the financial stability of the state’s safety-net hospital system, according to a new study by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and Virginia Commonwealth University published in the June issue
June 02, 2014
![Funding shortfall of more than $1.3 billion could push safety-net hospitals to financial brink](https://healthpolicy.ucla.edu/sites/default/files/styles/two_column_card/public/ucla-campus-logo.jpg.webp?itok=GWmjMwfl)
Press Releases
California will fare better than other states but will still feel pain Public hospitals in California that serve the poorest patients could face a $1.54 billion funding shortfall in 2019, when federal funding cuts go into effect. Those cuts, along with health-care cost inflation, could jeopardize the financial stability of the state’s safety-net hospital system, according to a new study by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and Virginia Commonwealth University published in the June issue
June 02, 2014