Lack of health care workers is a struggle in rural communities
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[November 20, 2021]
By Zeta Cross
(The Center Square) – Shortages of doctors,
dentists, nurses and other health care providers have hit crisis levels
in Illinois’ rural counties.
“Rural residents often wait longer for a provider visit or forgo medical
or dental care altogether,” said Dr. Hana Hinkle, the interim director
for the National Center for Rural Health Professions at the University
of Illinois School of Medicine in Rockford. “There might not be certain
specialties available in rural communities. Hospitals are farther away
so people with transportation issues have a much harder time getting
care.”
The result is more serious illness and higher death rates in Illinois’
62 non-metropolitan counties because more people wait until they are
critically ill before they seek treatment.
Rural residents are more likely to die from one of the five leading
causes of death (heart disease, cancer, unintentional injury, chronic
lower respiratory disease and stroke) than people in urban and suburban
areas where people have easier access to medical care, a new report by
the Illinois Rural Health Summit has found.
Illinois has been aware of the physician shortage in rural communities
for 30 years, Hinkle said
“It is a complex problem with no easy solution, but we have been making
some progress,” she said.
The University of Illinois looks carefully at medical, dental and
nursing school applicants to find and encourage students from rural
communities who have ties to their communities and who were active in
their communities in high school. Those applicants are much more likely
to return to practice in rural communities when they finish their
medical training.
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Loan forgiveness programs incentivize them to choose to practice in
rural communities.
Even so, the shortage of primary care doctors, dentists and nurses who
work in rural areas is on track to get worse in the next 10 years.
The Rural Health Summit Report highlighted three efforts that are making
a difference. First is the creation of care teams that are taking some
of the workload off physicians. Care team members include nurse
practitioners, physician’s assistants, certified nursing midwives and
certified registered nurse anesthetists. They can take patient
histories, conduct physical exams, deliver babies, provide pre- and
post-operative care and make referrals to other specialties.
Second is creation of partnerships between hospitals and the public
health department. In southern Illinois, the Healthy Southern Illinois
Delta Network is a coordinated effort with the participation of Southern
Illinois Healthcare, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine
Center for Rural Health and Social Service Development and the
University of Illinois extension with Health Departments in Jackson
County, Franklin-Williamson Bi-County, Southern Seven, Perry County,
Hamilton County and Egyptian County.
Finally, access to tele-medicine is saving lives and being expanded.
Patients in rural areas are 40 percent more likely to wind up in the
hospital for a preventable problem than people in urban and suburban
areas who have easier access to consultations with specialists.
Telehealth appointments with specialists can reduce the preventable
hospitalization rate in rural communities by as much as 16%. Telehealth
consultations for people with chronic conditions can reduce the
mortality rate by 16.6%.
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