More hospital closings in rural America
add risk for pregnant women
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[July 18, 2017]
By Jilian Mincer
Bay Minette, Alabama (Reuters) - Dr. Nicole
Arthur, a family practice physician, was trained to avoid Cesarean
deliveries in child-birth, unless medically necessary, because surgery
increases risks and recovery time.
But she has adjusted her approach since arriving last year at the 70-bed
North Baldwin Infirmary in rural, southern Alabama.
Low patient admissions and high costs mean the hospital does not have
doctors on site around-the-clock to administer anesthesia in the case of
an unexpected emergency Cesarean.
As a result, Dr. Arthur performs the surgery if there are any signs of
complication, rather than waiting and running the risk that comes with
the 20 to 30 minutes it takes for an anesthesiologist to arrive in the
middle of the night.
"It's better for me to do a C-section when I suspect that something may
happen," she said of her new strategy. “Getting the baby out healthy and
happy outweighs some of the risk.”
Physicians in rural communities across America are facing the same tough
choices as Dr. Arthur. Hospitals are scaling back services, shutting
their maternity wards or closing altogether, according to data from
hospitals, state health departments, the federal government and rural
health organizations.
Nationally, 119 rural hospitals that have shut since 2005, with 80 of
those closures having occurred since 2010, according to the most recent
data from the North Carolina Rural Health Research Program.
To save on insurance and staffing costs, maternity departments are often
among the first to get shuttered inside financially stressed rural
hospitals, according medical professionals and healthcare experts.
“It’s been a slow and steady decline,” said Michael Topchik, the
National Leader for the Chartis Center for Rural Health, about maternity
ward closings. “It’s very expensive care to offer, especially when it’s
lower volume.”
More than 200 maternity wards closed between 2004 and 2014 because of
higher costs, fewer births and staffing shortages, leaving 54 percent of
rural counties across the United States without hospital-based
obstetrics, data from the University of Minnesota’s Rural Health
Research Center show.
The trend has escalated recently even though the national healthcare
law, known as Obamacare, was designed in part to help rural hospitals
thrive. But unpaid patient debt has risen among rural hospitals by 50
percent since the Affordable Care Act was passed, according to the
National Rural Health Association, especially in states that decided not
to expand Medicaid – the state and federal insurance program for the
poor.
The outlook for these hospitals was not poised to improve had Congress
approved legislation to replace Obamacare. Senate Republicans’ proposed
cuts to Medicaid would have pushed about 150 more rural hospitals into
the red, according to the Chartis Center for Rural Health, mainly in
states that voted Republican in the last election.
But late on Monday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the
Republican effort to repeal and immediately replace Obamacare will not
be successful, after two of McConnell's Senate conservatives announced
that they would not support the bill.
PAIN FELT BEYOND THE BELTWAY
The consequences go beyond politics.
When local doctors and midwives leave town, rural women lose access to
essential services. Many skip or delay prenatal care that could prevent
complications, premature birth or even death. The U.S. infant mortality
rate is among the highest in developing countries at 5.8 deaths per
1,000 births.
Pregnant woman in rural areas are more likely to have their deliveries
induced or by Cesarean section that, while potentially life-saving, are
more expensive and risky than a normal vaginal birth, according to
patients, medical professionals and researchers.
Almost a year after her second son’s birth, Courtney Cross is still
repaying money she borrowed because of the smaller paychecks and larger
gas bills she had from driving 60 minutes each way to a specialist in
Mobile, Alabama.
[to top of second column] |
Dr. Nicole Arthur (R), visits Tariyana Wiggins, a high school
teacher, shortly after the birth of Troy O’Brien Williams in the
hospital room at the North Baldwin Infirmary, a 70-bed hospital in
rural Bay Minette, Alabama, U.S. on June 22, 2017. REUTERS/Jilian
Mincer
“There were some days I had to reschedule because of the money factor,”
said Cross, a medical technician and mother of two, who some months made
the trip multiple times. “I had to make money.”
Cross is not alone. The most common reasons for the hospital closures
are people and money. More and more people are moving to urban areas in
pursuit of work and a better paycheck. And in most states, lower revenue
from insurance and U.S. government payments are pushing these hospitals
into financial stress, particularly in states that did not build out
their Medicaid programs as Obamacare allowed.
“The majority of births in rural America are paid for by Medicaid, and
Medicaid is not the most generous payer,” said Diane Calmus, government
affairs and policy manager for the National Rural Health Association.
“For most hospitals it is a money losing proposition.”
This is the main reason why Connie Trujillo shuttered her midwife
practice this spring in Las Vegas, New Mexico. The local hospital had
closed its maternity ward, and the closest hospital to deliver babies
was at least 60 miles away. She sees more elective inductions because
the patients live far away and can't afford to go back and forth.
“Some of them just don’t have the resources,” she said. A year after
shuttering, the hospital is trying to hire additional staff to reopen
the ward.
MORE SCHEDULED DELIVERIES
The number of induced U.S. deliveries nationally has doubled since 1990
to about 23.3 percent, but rates are significantly higher in rural
areas, where it is routinely offered to women traveling long distances,
especially if the weather is bad.
Induced labor and surgery come at a high cost. Commercial insurance and
Medicaid paid about 50 percent more for Cesarean than vaginal births,
according to a 2013 Truven Health Analytics report. The report said
Medicaid payments for maternal and newborn care for a vaginal birth was
$9,131 versus $13,590 for a C-section.
In largely rural West Virginia - where the Summersville Regional Medical
Center became the latest hospital to stop delivering newborns earlier
this year - elected inductions for first time mothers rose to 28.7
percent in 2015 from 24.1 percent in 2011, according to data provided to
Reuters by the West Virginia Perinatal Partnership, a statewide effort
to improve care.
"Inductions allow the physicians to manage their case loads and timing
of deliveries,” said Amy Tolliver, director of the Perinatal
Partnership. “We know that inductions are happening in small hospitals
that have difficulty with staffing."
To address staffing issues at Dr Arthur’s hospital in Alabama, the
facility paid temporary doctors for a year to keep the department open
when one of its two maternity doctors stopped doing deliveries.
“It’s important to have access (to obstetrics),” said hospital president
Benjamin Hansert, who also organized a group of doctors from Mobile
about 40 minutes away to cover some of the shifts so that staff doctors
would not always be on call. “Where the mother goes for care, the rest
of the family will follow.”
For the full graphic on hospital closures, click
http://tmsnrt.rs/2us7qDM
(Editing by Caroline Humer and Edward Tobin)
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