OHSU narrows expected operating loss

Viewpoint
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OHSU logo
OHSU logo

Oregon Health & Science University narrowed its projected operating losses, performing better than expected in the first two months of the fiscal year that began July 1, the university’s board of directors heard during its regular public meeting Friday.

OHSU’s board in June approved an annual operating budget of $5.5 billion, with a projected $25 million deficit.

Following the COVID-19 pandemic, the university responded to rising expenses due to inflation and labor costs by eliminating 500 positions over the summer and realigning its focus toward maximizing the delivery of complex, specialized health care. On Friday, health system leaders reported on efforts to increase access for patients who need cancer treatment, neurologic procedures, cardiac care and other complex surgeries available only at Oregon’s academic health center.

Lawrence J. Furnstahl has short gray hair, eye glasses, and is wearing a gray suit and multicolor bowtie, smiling in a green area at OHSU.
Lawrence J. Furnstahl (OHSU)

“Strategic alignment at this challenging time will protect and enhance OHSU’s unique role as Oregon’s public health sciences university with statutory statewide missions in education, research, patient care and outreach,” reported Lawrence Furnstahl, OHSU’s chief financial officer.

The university is faring better than budgeted in the first two months of the fiscal year, at $16 million in the red, which is $19 million better than expected for July and August.

“Results in the early months of the fiscal year can be erratic,” Furnstahl cautioned in a memo to the board.

He added that complex patient care activity has increased more than expected. OHSU will continue to balance the expected increases in wages and costs through rigorous cost-savings, while also investing in patient-facing staff for behavioral health and other priorities of the state of Oregon.

In other business, the board:


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