HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PRESBYTERIAN
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
Download2. Community Health Needs Assessment
The web address where the Community Benefit Plan is published on the hospital's website:
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:
Alzheimer's Family Center- older adults with Alzheimer's/dementia Big Brothers Big Sisters of Orange County and the Inland Empire- at-risk youth, low-income community CalOptima- low-income Medi-Cal members, people with disabilities, uninsured/underinsured population Cambodian Family- Cambodian and Southeast Asian immigrants/refugees, low-income families Camino Health Center- uninsured/underinsured, Latino communities, immigrants, low-income Cancer Kinship- cancer patients, caregivers Charitable Ventures- supports nonprofits who are serving the vulnerable communities in Orange County City of Costa Mesa- various City of Irvine- various Clinic in the Park- low-income, underinsured/uninsured families Community Action Partnership Orange County- low-income families, homeless individuals Community Health Initiative of Orange County- underserved communities, low-income, immigrants Council on Aging- older adults, elder abuse victims, isolated older adults County of Orange Social Services Agency- low-income families, foster youth, older adults, unhoused residents, people with disabilities Families Forward- homeless, low-income families, children Family Assistance Ministries-homeless families, food-insecure households Friendship Shelter- individuals and families experiencing homelessness Girls Inc. OC- at-risk youth Human Options- survivors of domestic violence, women, children, families in crisis Korean Community Services-Korean immigrants, seniors, low-income families, limited English proficient residents Latino Health Access- Latino communities, immigrants, low-income residents Mercy House- individuals experiencing homelessness MOMS OC- pregnant women, low-income Multi-Ethnic Collaborative of Community Agencies- ethnic minority communities, immigrants NAMI Orange County- individuals with mental illness, families Omid Institute- refugees, immigrants, Afghan and Middle Eastern communities Orange County Asian and Pacific Islander Community Alliance- Asian American and Pacific Islander communities Orange County Chinese Community Service- Chinese-speaking immigrants, seniors, low-income families Orange County Health Care Agency- low-income residents, various vulnerable populations Orange County United Way- families in poverty, financially unstable households Pacific Islander Health Partnership- native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander communities, immigrants Project Youth OC- at-risk youth, low-income students Providence Health- medically underserved patients, seniors Public Law Center-low-income residents, immigrants Radiant Health Centers- LGBTQ+ individuals, people living with HIV/AIDS South Coast Chinese Cultural Association- Chinese immigrant individuals South County for All- marginalized communities, immigrants South County Outreach- low-income families, food-insecure households Susie Q Center- older adults, isolated seniors Unidos South OC- Latino families, immigrants, underserved South Orange County residents
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:
We shared our CHNA on our website and plan to hold a community sharing summit event in June 2026. There we will share our CHNA findings as well as our Implementation Strategy plan.
The web address where the CHNA is publicly accessible:
3. Community Benefit Expenses
| Vulnerable Population | |
|---|---|
| Traditional Charity Care | $ 5,522,834 |
| Medi-Cal | $ 71,490,983 |
| Other Means-Tested Government (Indigent Care) | $ 0 |
| Sum Financial Assistance and Means-Tested Government Programs | $ 77,013,817 |
| Vulnerable Population | Broader Community | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Community Health Improvement | $ 2,785,721 | $ 494,963 | $ 3,280,684 |
| Community Benefit Operations | $ 1,604,407 | $ 0 | $ 1,604,407 |
| Health Professions Education | $ 0 | $ 537,641 | $ 537,641 |
| Subsidized Health Services | $ 42,847 | $ 72,400 | $ 115,247 |
| Research | $ 0 | $ 0 | $ 0 |
| Cash and In-kind Contributions for Community Benefits | $ 7,548,577 | $ 2,033,790 | $ 9,582,367 |
| Other Community Benefits | $ 0 | $ 0 | $ 0 |
| Total Other Benefits | $ 11,981,552 | $ 3,138,794 | $ 15,120,346 |
| Vulnerable Population | Broader Community | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Community Benefits* | $ 88,995,369 | $ 3,138,794 | $ 92,134,163 |
| Medicare | $ 179,074,665 | $ 179,074,665 | |
| Total Community Benefits with Medicare | $ 268,070,034 | $ 3,138,794 | $ 271,208,828 |
*Aggregate from tables above.
Other relevant information to the hospital's community benefit plan not otherwise captured: