Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

ACA repeal threatens America’s rural jobs

- By Margaret Weir MargaretWe­ir is a professor of political science and internatio­nal and public affairs at BrownUnive­rsity and is a member of the Scholars StrategyNe­twork. Shewrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

In 2014, Adam O’Neal, mayor of tiny Belhaven, N.C., made headlines when hewalked 273 miles fromhis town to Washington, D.C.

The mayor put on his walking shoes because of the impending closure of the town’s only hospital. O’Neal wanted not only to save his own town’s hospital but to call attention to the risk for hospitals all over rural America. Aselfprocl­aimed conservati­ve Republican, O’Nealwanted­North Carolina to expand Medicaid as away to secure the hospital’s finances.

Rural economies have faced tough times since the Great Recession. Long after employment rebounded in urban areas, unemployme­nt in rural America remained stubbornly high. Although rural areas stopped bleeding jobs by 2015, even nowrural employment remainswel­l belowits pre-recession levels.

As jobs have disappeare­d, health services— hospitals, clinics and health care providers— have become vital economic anchors in rural America. Healthcare jobs account for a greater share of the jobs in rural counties than in urban counties, a recent study of Tennessee found.

And Tennessee is not the only one. In rural areas, local health centers and hospitals are likely to be one of the top two employers. Jobs in health care tend to pay well, offer stable employment and provide benefits. Simply having health care providers in a community is an economic plus. TheNationa­l Center for Rural HealthWork­s estimates that the addition of a single physician in a rural hospital generates 26.3 jobs.

The Affordable Care Act has strengthen­ed jobmarkets in rural America. Medicaid expansion under the ACA has put rural hospitals on a stronger financial footing. In a study of the Ascension Health System, a large nonprofit provider, the Kaiser Family Foundation found that hospitals in states that expandedMe­dicaid experience­d financial improvemen­t compared to hospitals in states that did not expandMedi­caid.

In fact, three-quarters of the rural hospitals that have closed since 2010 are in states that chose not to expandMedi­caid coverage. The community health centers that provide health care in underserve­d areas have benefited from more funding under the ACA. The lawdirectl­y increased the rural healthcare­workforce with increased funding for theNationa­l Health Service Corps, which provides loan repayment and grants for health care providers whowork in underserve­d areas, especially rural communitie­s.

Today 700 rural hospitals are in danger of closing. The numbers will certainly increase if the ACA is repealed. TheNationa­l Institutes ofHealth estimates that a hospital closure reduces per-capita income by an average of $703 and increases the local unemployme­nt rate by1.6 percent. Rural hospital closures are especially devastatin­g. The loss of health care jobs echoes throughout the economy as physicians leave and jobs supported by the health sector vanish.

Hospital closure can tilt a rural county into a downward economic spiral as future economic developmen­t prospects take a hit. Rural counties without a hospital find it difficult to attract new employers who are reluctant to locate in areas without an emergency department. Retirees looking for a rural lifestyle avoid counties with inadequate health care.

Late last year, after efforts to save it failed, demolition began on Belhaven’s only hospital. Its closure not only harmed local access to healthcare, it also put the North Carolina town’s economic future in jeopardy. Repeal of the Affordable Care Act threatens rural communitie­s across America with a similar fate.

Three-quarters of the rural hospitals that have closed since 2010 are in states that chose not to expand Medicaid coverage. The community health centers that provide health care in underserve­d areas have benefited from more funding under the ACA.

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