The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Address makes a difference

State’s rural residents have less access to medical, dental services

- By Jodie Mozdzer Gil C-HIT WRITER

“My battle is to make sure the basic hospital services, like critical care units, are maintained in the small, rural hospitals.”

State Rep. Susan Johnson, D-Windham

Connecticu­t’s rural residents die at higher rates than their city and suburban counterpar­ts and a large percentage of those deaths may be preventabl­e if better public health programs or better access to health care services were available, according to the latest data from the National Center for Health Statistics.

Doctor shortages and long commutes make it harder for rural residents to get health care. And some officials worry that changes in hospital ownership and the Affordable Care Act could amplify existing problems.

“We have excellent medical care as a general rule in the state,” state Rep. Susan Johnson, D-Windham, said. But rural and other high poverty areas, where many residents are on Medicaid rather than private health insurance, remain vulnerable to hospital service reductions and changes in eligibilit­y for health care coverage, she said.

“My battle is to make sure the basic hospital services, like critical care units, are maintained in the small, rural hospitals,” Johnson said. “If you take (hospital consolidat­ion) in combinatio­n with the proposals to change the Affordable Care Act, that in

combinatio­n would definitely decimate not just Connecticu­t, but most places around the country, in terms of access to health care,” Johnson said.

Of Connecticu­t’s 169 municipali­ties, 68 are classified as rural, based on population and number of people per square mile. They’re home to about 9 percent of the state’s 3.57 million population, or about 320,000 residents.

In Litchfield County, the rural designatio­n applies to 20 towns, including Woodbury, Harwinton, Canaan, New Hartford, Salisbury.

In Connecticu­t, rural residents were more likely than their city and suburban counterpar­ts to die from four of the top five causes of death: heart disease, cancer, chronic lower respirator­y disease and unintentio­nal injury. The state’s findings mirror national trends, according to a 2017 report published by the Centers for Disease Control, which analyzed data across the country from 1999 to 2014. Nationally, rural residents report higher rates of adverse health factors, such as smoking, obesity and lower use of seatbelts.

Connecticu­t’s death rate from heart disease in 2015 was about 60 per 100,000 people, but in rural areas, the rate was 72 per 100,000. The cancer death rate was roughly 104 per 100,000 statewide but 127 per 100,000 in rural areas.

Rural residents in Connecticu­t were almost twice as likely to die from chronic lower respirator­y disease, which includes asthma, chronic bronchitis and emphysema. And their death rate as a result of unintentio­nal accidents was about 50 per 100,000 compared with a statewide rate of 38.

“The No. 1 issue is transporta­tion,” said Mary Winar, manager of the state Office of Rural Health, which is based at Northweste­rn Connecticu­t Community College in Winsted.

Rural areas have fewer doctors, and they are more scattered. With public transporta­tion centered in more urban areas, those living outside of cities often have to fend for themselves to get to appointmen­ts.

Robert Pope, 49, of Sharon, uses a Dial-A-Ride service through Geer Village Senior Community in Canaan to get to his doctor appointmen­ts. Pope, who lives alone and has no car, has 4-hour-long dialysis appointmen­ts three times a week in Torrington, 45 minutes away.

“I’ve tried using other (services). They’re not always reliable or dependable,” said Pope. “Without the Dial-A-Ride service from Geer, I would literally have no dependable way of getting to my dialysis appointmen­ts.”

Nancy Heaton, CEO for the Foundation for Community Health in Sharon, said Litchfield County has studied options to improve transporta­tion. Loop transit services aren’t practical in a rural setting, she said, and on-demand services can be costly.

The foundation has given grants to add trips through Geer’s Dial-A-Ride service and others like it. Still, when the foundation surveyed residents in the Connecticu­t and New York towns surroundin­g Sharon Hospital, 60 percent said transporta­tion was one of the main barriers to accessing health care.

“People living here aren’t used to public transporta­tion, so it takes a lot for people to get used to thinking about (it),” Heaton said. “They’re getting there through friends, and family, borrowing cars, or they’re just not going.”

The same is true in Windham County. A survey of 750 clients of the Generation­s Family Health Center found 35 percent missed at least one health care appointmen­t in 2016 because of transporta­tion issues. About 67 percent reported a lack of reliable transporta­tion, either because they didn’t own a car or couldn’t always afford to

use it.

Two Connecticu­ts

Connecticu­t is one of the top performers in the country in patient-to-doctor ratios, but its three predominan­tly rural counties, Windham, Tolland and Litchfield, ranked the lowest in the state in this category, according to 2017 County Health Rankings data published by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute.

Windham County has 1,950 patients per primary care provider, compared with New Haven County, with 1,090. Middlesex County has 1,350 patients per primary care provider. The state average was 1,180.

Rural areas fare much worse in number of dentists, with Windham County, for example, showing 2,380 patients per dentist, about half the state average of 1,230. New Haven County is slightly above the state average at 1,350 as is Middlesex County at 1,340.

For several years, not one dentist in Litchfield County accepted adults on Medicaid, Heaton said, forcing those patients to travel to the UConn Health Center in Farmington for dental care. The foundation gave money to help the Community Health and Wellness Center in Torrington add dental services in 2008.

“Why is there a shortage of physicians over here? They don’t want to work over here,” said Arvind Shaw, the CEO of Generation­s Family Health Center. “That is not acceptable.”

“When you look at all these things, you can see all these anomalies,” Shaw said. “It’s because the state of Connecticu­t does not

have a plan ... for health equity. There is not a system that actually maps resources.”

Maurice Maddox, 60, of Canaan, said it took him more than a month to find a doctor who would take Medicaid and help him with depression and suicidal thoughts. He depends on Geer’s Dial-A-Ride and state contractor LogistiCar­e’s transporta­tion services to travel to psychiatri­st appointmen­ts at UConn Health center and to his therapist in Salisbury.

“It’s important for me to see them,” Maddox said. “Not being able to talk about it, keeping it bottled up inside, I think it would be pretty bad for me.”

The problems feed on each other. Fewer doctors in remote areas forces residents to drive farther.

“If we could get the providers and specialist­s here locally, transporta­tion might not be such an issue,” said Joanne Borduas, CEO for the Community Health & Wellness Center of Greater Torrington.

Hospital changes

Hartford Health Care has acquired two hospitals that serve largely rural population­s: Windham and William W. Backus in Norwich. The system is working toward affiliatin­g with Charlotte Hungerford Hospital in Torrington.

Being part of a larger health network could help rural hospitals attract new doctors, said Shawn Mawhiney, director of communicat­ions for Hartford Health Care.

Recently Windham recruited four new orthopedic surgeons and conducted its first spinal surgery in a decade, Mawhiney said.

“That would have been nearly impossible if Windham wasn’t part of the Hartford Healthcare system,” he said.

Others see hospital consolidat­ion as problemati­c for rural patients.

Two years ago, Hartford Health Care reduced the number of beds in Windham’s critical care unit, a change Mawhiney said was based on patient volume. Some worry that fewer beds could lead to patients’ having to be transferre­d to another hospital for more serious emergencie­s, but Mawhiney said this was happening even before the change.

Johnson, the state representa­tive, said the Windham community fought changes to Windham Hospital’s critical care center in 2015, and said many believe the hospital can’t help them as much as it used to.

“It’s sad and devastatin­g,” Johnson said.

But Mawhiney said the goal is to keep the hospital open, which requires being smarter about how to allocate resources. With a higher percentage of Medicaid and Medicare patients in rural areas, hospitals there don’t always get fully reimbursed for their services, he said.

“It’s not a Windham Hospital issue. It’s a community hospital issue,” Mawhiney said. “There are very few stand-alone community hospitals left, especially in rural areas. Those hospitals are struggling.”

 ?? Carl Jordan Castro photo ?? Maurice Maddox, 60, of Canaan, said he had trouble finding a doctor who took Medicaid in rural northern Litchfield County.
Carl Jordan Castro photo Maurice Maddox, 60, of Canaan, said he had trouble finding a doctor who took Medicaid in rural northern Litchfield County.
 ?? Carl Jordan Castro photo ?? Robert Pope, 49, of Sharon, waits as the Geer Village Senior Center Dial-A-Ride bus brings him to a medical appointmen­t in June.
Carl Jordan Castro photo Robert Pope, 49, of Sharon, waits as the Geer Village Senior Center Dial-A-Ride bus brings him to a medical appointmen­t in June.

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