Modern Healthcare

After bitter closure, rural Texas hospital defies the odds and reopens

- By Charlotte Huff, Kaiser Health News

FIVE MONTHS AGO, the 6,500 residents of Crockett, Texas, witnessed a bit of a resurrecti­on—at least in rural hospital terms.

A little more than a year after the local hospital shut its doors, the 25-bed facility reopened its emergency department, inpatient beds and some related services, albeit on a smaller scale.

Without a hospital, residents of Crockett, located 120 miles north of Houston, were 35 miles away along rural roads from the next closest hospital when a medical crisis struck, said Dr. Bob Grier, board president of the Houston County Hospital District, which is the government­al authority that oversees what’s now named Crockett Medical Center, a public hospital. “Someone falls off the roof. A heart attack. A stroke. A diabetic coma. Start naming these rather serious things, and healthcare is known for its golden hour,” he said.

The late-July reopening of Crockett Medical makes it a bit of a unicorn in a state that has led the nation in rural hospital closures. Since January 2010, 17 of the 94 shuttered hospitals have been in Texas, or 18%, including two that closed in December, according to data from the University of North Carolina’s Sheps Center for Health Services Research.

Crockett’s story also reflects some of the challenges faced by rural hospitals everywhere. Board members frequently have limited background in healthcare management and yet are responsibl­e for making financial decisions. Add to that mix a Lone Star State resistance to raising local property taxes. An effort to increase the county’s tax of 15 cents per $100 property valuation for the hospital district has been defeated twice since the hospital closed.

And a small rural hospital like Crockett’s has “no leverage” when negotiatin­g reimbursem­ent rates with insurers, Grier repeatedly pointed out.

The tough reality is that too many rural hospitals in Texas and elsewhere, when negotiatin­g with insurers and other financial players, “are almost always negotiatin­g from weakness and sometimes from literally leaning out over the edge of the (survival) cliff,” said Dr. Nancy Dickey, executive director of the A&M Rural and Community Health Institute at the Texas A&M Health Science Center. Rural communitie­s must think more creatively about how to meet at least some of their health needs without a traditiona­l hospital, whether it’s forming partnershi­ps with nearby towns or expanding telemedici­ne, Dickey said. “There is little doubt in my mind that many of these communitie­s are going to see their hospitals close and are not going to be able to make an economic case to reopen them,” she said.

The A&M institute, which published a report in December looking at these challenges for three Texas communitie­s, recently land- ed a $4 million, five-year federal grant to help rural hospitals nationwide keep their doors open or find other ways to maintain local healthcare.

Demographi­cs and decisions

The financial headwinds have been particular­ly fierce in Texas, one of 14 states that have not expanded Medicaid eligibilit­y since enactment of the Affordable Care Act. “That makes a huge difference,” said John Henderson, CEO of the Texas Organizati­on of Rural & Community Hospitals, known as TORCH. “But that doesn’t change the reality that we aren’t going to do it.”

Leading up to the state’s biennial legislativ­e session, which begins in January, rural leaders are making the case that state legislator­s need to take steps to bolster the state’s 161 rural hospitals, starting with rectifying underpayme­nts for Medicaid patients. As the state’s program has transition­ed to managed care, reimbursem­ents have shrunk over time to the point that rural hospitals are losing as much as $60 million annually, according to TORCH officials, who cite state data.

They also support a congressio­nal bill, HR 5678, that would make it easier for rural hospitals to close their inpatient beds but retain some services, such as an emergency room and primary-care clinic. Under current federal

regulation­s, facilities that make such a move are no longer considered a hospital and can’t be reimbursed by Medicare and Medicaid at hospital rates, which are often higher than payments to clinics or individual doctors. Those lower rates make it harder for stripped-down facilities to keep up their operations, said Don McBeath, TORCH’s director of government relations.

Crockett’s hospital, then called Timberland­s Hospital, abruptly closed in the summer of 2017 after just a few weeks’ notice from its management company, Texas-based Little River Healthcare. Little River, which was the subject of an analysis by Modern Healthcare that showed several of its hospitals engaged in unusually high laboratory billing for out-of-state patients, has since filed for bankruptcy. Two other rural hospitals affiliated with Little River closed their doors in December.

As it struggled to stay open, Crockett’s hospital was treating a population that was increasing­ly poor and aging, according to Texas A&M’s report. Crockett communitie­s ers describe is In “Community the the featured—the hospital report— 1” as among overstaffe­d research- three with its daily more average than census 200 employees of three hospi- given talized patients. Also, they wrote, board members should have more closely questioned the management company. Board members said they were given data at each meeting, “but that data did not suggest the imminent demise of the hospital,” the report’s authors wrote.

Fighting the closure tide

Leaders in Crockett tried to capture the interest of other hospital systems to reopen and manage the facility, without success, Grier said. Along with staffers losing their jobs, the community knew it would be more difficult to persuade people to relocate or retire to the area without a hospital nearby, he said.

Every weekday at noon for weeks on end, a small group of two to 20 people gathered beneath the hospital’s front portico to pray for some avenue to reopen, Grier said. Then, as the odds looked increasing­ly long, they got a call out of the blue from two Austin-based doctors.

“I feel God was involved,” Grier said. “They have told us that they were looking for some kind of a larger investment.”

Those initial conversati­ons resulted in a five-year lease arrangemen­t between the hospital district and the management company, operating as Crockett Medical Center.

Dr. Kelly Tjelmeland and Dr. Subir Chhikara are listed on the medical cen- ter’s website as chairman and president, respective­ly. They didn’t respond to requests for comment about their plans for the hospital. But in a presentati­on to the board before the lease was signed, they said one of their goals is to get the facility classified as a critical-access hospital, which enables a higher reimbursem­ent for Medicare patients.

Along with operating a primary-care clinic and 24/7 emergency room, Crockett Medical staffs a handful of hospital beds for patients who need more-limited medical treatment, such as heart monitoring or intravenou­s antibiotic­s, Grier said. But when the Crockett hospital reopened, it didn’t resume delivering babies. Only 66 of Texas’ rural hospitals still provide obstetric services, according to McBeath.

Eliminatin­g baby deliveries was one possibilit­y on the table at another rural hospital if that hospital CEO hadn’t pulled off the sort of Texas miracle that Crockett has yet to achieve—persuading local voters to support a tax increase. Adam Willmann, CEO of 25bed Goodall-Witcher Hospital Authority, northwest of Waco, said that he and others made the case in dozens of meetings that a hospital property tax was needed to support the financiall­y struggling hospital.

In November, 58% of the county’s voters backed the new tax, despite the community’s political leanings. During that same election, 80% voted to re-elect Republican Sen. Ted Cruz.

“They want to be 5 minutes, 15 minutes from an ER and not 35 miles down the road,” Willmann said, referring to the nearest hospitals in Waco. “And they’re willing to pay a little more for it.” ●

Kaiser Health News is a not-for-profit news service covering healthcare issues. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Kaiser Family Foundation that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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Source: Modern Healthcare Metrics

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