Florida Hospitals Act Fast To Discharge Gun Victims — Especially if They’re Not Insured - KFF Health News
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Guns, Race, and Profit
Florida Hospitals Act Fast To Discharge Gun Victims — Especially if They’re Not Insured
A data analysis by KFF Health News and The Trace offers a look at how insurance affects the care of gunshot wound victims.
Alea Bates was shot seven times at close range while delivering food for Uber Eats in Tallahassee, Florida, in 2019. Bates did not have health insurance at the time. Doctors sent her home from the hospital after four days. (Alicia Devine for KFF Health News)
Guns, Race, and Profit
Florida Hospitals Act Fast To Discharge Gun Victims — Especially if They’re Not Insured
A data analysis by KFF Health News and The Trace offers a look at how insurance affects the care of gunshot wound victims.
By Daniel Chang, Fred Clasen-Kelly, and Olga Pierce, The Trace
June 29, 2026
Republish
Disponible en Español
Alea Bates wasn’t ready to leave Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare’s main hospital four days after a stranger shot her seven times at close range. Miraculously, hospital records show, none of the bullets damaged her internal organs.
This story also ran on The Trace. It can be republished for free.
But after surgery, Bates said, she couldn’t get out of bed or walk to the bathroom without help. She complained of intense pain radiating down her left leg, weakness in her knee, and a numbing sensation below it, according to hospital records. Bates, who worked as an Uber Eats driver, didn’t have the strength to drive a car.
Still, Bates said, the hospital told her it was time to go.
“They didn’t do any further X-rays or CTs or MRIs to figure out why my knee was numb,” she said. “And they were just like, you know, ‘It’ll go away.’”
Doctors said she was medically stable, Bates said, and because she had no health insurance, they could not send her to a rehabilitation hospital or a skilled nursing facility, which can charge thousands of dollars a day for such care.
“They were just like, We need the bed for somebody who has insurance,” she said. “That’s of course, you know, what they say without saying it.”
At least one firearm injury is treated in an American emergency room every 30 minutes. Tens of thousands die from their injuries every year. Many more, like Bates, are left to face long recoveries, steep medical debt, and enduring trauma.
How insurance affects the care of gunshot wound victims has remained shrouded in mystery — until now, due to a new analysis by The Trace and KFF Health News of data that Florida hospitals compile to collect payments from insurance companies and file with the state.
When uninsured patients arrive at hospitals in Florida with gunshot wounds, on average they spend significantly fewer days in the hospital — in some cases half the time — than those with health insurance, according to the data analysis.
Among the most severely injured patients, the uninsured stayed three fewer days in the hospital on average than their counterparts with insurance.
The data was obtained exclusively for this reporting on gun violence hospitalizations in the state, aided by Florida state law.
The newsrooms spent more than a year analyzing the records, which did not identify patients. The data contained patients’ insurance status, their residential ZIP code, their race, and other demographic info. Reporters reviewed academic studies and government documents and interviewed health policy experts, doctors, activists, and victims of gun violence or their relatives.
The results are a first-of-its-kind look at what happens to the insured and the uninsured who are shot and admitted to the hospital for treatment.
Across Florida, the analysis of hospital billing data from 2018 to 2024 obtained from the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration shows:
Uninsured patients make up a quarter of the more than 20,000 gunshot wound hospitalizations identified,...