COMMUNITY REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER-FRESNO

COMMUNITY REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER-FRESNO

2823 FRESNO STREET, FRESNO, CA 93721
HCAI ID
106100717
License No.
040000096
Licensee
FRESNO COMMUNITY HOSPITAL & MEDICAL CENTER
Report Period
09/01/2024 - 08/31/2025
Spending:
Total Community Benefit Spending
$211,179,611.00
Total Community Benefits to Vulnerable Population
$170,672,705.00
Total Community Benefits to Broader Community
$40,506,906.00
Medicare Total
$211,179,611.00
Medi-Cal Total
$157,501,000.00
Charity Care Total
$12,677,000.00
View Community Benefit Plans on the Open Data Portal

1. Community Benefit Plan

Click on the button below to download the community benefit plan.

The documents are being made available as provided by the facility, in accordance with Health and safety Code 127350 and California Code of Regulations Section 95102. If there are any issues with accessibility, please notify us directly at communitybenefit@hcai.ca.gov

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2. Community Health Needs Assessment

The web address where the Community Benefit Plan is published on the hospital's website:

http://www.communitymedical.org/about-us/our-impact#comm_benefit

The year the hospital last conducted a Community Health Needs Assessment (CHNA):

2025

What community groups attended or engaged with the most recent CHNA process? Identify the vulnerable populations represented by these:

Community input was obtained from focus groups, interviews and a listening session with key stakeholders and partners from community agencies and organizations that include those representing medically underserved, low-income and/or minority populations. Community agencies and organizations involved in the CHNA process included Best Buddies, BLACK Wellness and Prosperity Center, Cultiva La Salud, Fresno American Indian Health, Fresno Area Hispanic Foundation, Fresno Housing Authority, Fresno Mission, Fresno Rainbow Pride, Hall Management, Hope Now, St. Rest Baptist Church, The Source, United Cerebral Palsy, Youth Leadership Institute, The Fresno Center, Central Valley Opportunity Center, Hope House Oakhurst, NAACP Branch 1084, North Fork Elementary, Dinuba/Visalia Parenting Network, Self-Help Enterprises, The Warehouse, Unidad Popular Benito Juarez, Cal Viva Health Net, CSU Fresno, Central Valley Community Foundation, Central Valley Health Policy Institute, Centro La Familia, Cradle to Career Fresno County, Downtown Fresno Partnership, Exceptional Parents Unlimited, First 5 Fresno County, Fresno County Department of Behavioral Health, Fresno County Department of Public Health, Fresno County Health Improvement Partnership, Fresno Interdenominational Refugee Ministries, Fresno Unified School District, Fresno-Madera Agency on Aging, Kings View Behavioral Health, Reading and Beyond, United Health Centers, United Way Fresno and Madera Counties, Anthem Blue Cross, California State Senate Office, City of Hanford, Equity in Black, Kings County Department of Public Health, Kings Partnership for Prosperity, Progress and Prevention, Kings United Way, Reestablishing Stratford, California Farmworkers Foundation, California Health Collaborative, Central Environmental Justice Network, Centro Binacional para el Desarrollo Indigena Oaxaqueno, Community Action Partnership of Madera County, Latinos Madera Club, Madera Coalition for Community Justice, Madera County Food Bank, Madera County Public Health Department, Madera United Methodist Church, Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church, Valley Children's Healthcare, First 5 Madera County, Jakara Movement, Central Valley Empowerment Alliance, First 5 of Tulare County, Kaweah Health Community Outreach, Lindsay Family Resource Center, Pixley Union School District, Tulare County Department of Public Health. The vulnerable populations represented by these groups included those exposed to medical or financial risk by virtue of being uninsured, underinsured or eligible for Medi-Cal and/or Medicare, racial and ethnic groups experiencing poor health outcomes, the unhoused, individuals identifying as LGBTQ+, people with disabilities, people with limited English proficiency, individuals and families experiencing food insecurity, communities with inadequate access to clean air and safe drinking water, with an environmental California Healthy Places Index score ranging from 1.8% in Tulare County to 12.5% in Madera County.

Does the Hospital make the CHNA report widely available to the public?

Yes

How the hospital made the Community Health Needs Assessment (CHNA) available to the public:

The CHNA is made available to the public by posting on the hospital website. Public comment is encouraged. Additionally, a paper copy of the report is available upon request.

The web address where the CHNA is publicly accessible:

http://www.communitymedical.org/about-us/our-impact#comm_benefit

3. Community Benefit Expenses

Vulnerable Population
Traditional Charity Care $ 12,677,000
Medi-Cal $ 157,501,000
Other Means-Tested Government (Indigent Care) $ 0
Sum Financial Assistance and Means-Tested Government Programs $ 170,178,000

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Vulnerable Population Broader Community Total
Community Health Improvement $ 410,371 $ 0 $ 410,371
Community Benefit Operations $ 0 $ 21,142 $ 21,142
Health Professions Education $ 0 $ 40,485,764 $ 40,485,764
Subsidized Health Services $ 0 $ 0 $ 0
Research $ 0 $ 0 $ 0
Cash and In-kind Contributions for Community Benefits $ 84,334 $ 0 $ 84,334
Other Community Benefits $ 0 $ 0 $ 0
Total Other Benefits $ 494,705 $ 40,506,906 $ 41,001,611

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Vulnerable Population Broader Community Total
Total Community Benefits* $ 170,672,705 $ 40,506,906 $ 211,179,611
Medicare $ 0 $ 0
Total Community Benefits with Medicare $ 170,672,705 $ 40,506,906 $ 211,179,611

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*Aggregate from tables above.

Other relevant information to the hospital's community benefit plan not otherwise captured:

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