Santa Fe New Mexican

Many in rural N.M. must go far afield for maternity, prenatal care

Nearly 18% of state’s women live more than 30 minutes from facility set up for births

- By Heerea Rikhraj

Christina spent much of 2023 traveling to Santa Fe for medical care during her pregnancy. She’d leave home about two hours before each doctor’s visit for the roughly 100-mile one way trip from her home in Mora County, in case accidents or constructi­on caused traffic slowdowns.

Two years ago, she would have received her care 30 miles down the road at Alta Vista Hospital in Las Vegas, N.M. But the hospital closed its delivery care unit in June 2022.

“People say it’s because they weren’t getting paid enough. I don’t really know why, but they closed,” said Christina, who asked New Mexico In Depth not to use her last name to protect her and her newborn’s privacy. “So I have to go to Santa Fe.”

Her high-risk pregnancy forced the trip to Santa Fe three times a week in her final months, with transporta­tion costs running about $150 a week.

The transporta­tion was unhealthy, too.

“They tell you they don’t want you to sit that long, but what do you think I’m doing? Sitting,” she said.

Once at the hospital in Santa Fe, Christina sometimes waited up to 30 minutes to see a specialist. Now, with the birth of a healthy baby in November, the cycle has started over — long drives to Santa Fe for infant and mother checkups for another year.

Christina isn’t alone. Across the state, one in three New Mexico counties are “maternity care deserts,” according to a 2022 March of Dimes report on maternal care nationwide. Nearly 18% of women in New Mexico lack access to birthing hospitals within 30 minutes of where they live, compared with 9.7% nationally, according to the report.

In addition to Alta Vista, hospitals in Gallup and Artesia recently closed their birthing units, leaving 14 rural birthing hospitals across the state. Raton’s hospital is considerin­g closing its delivery unit, according to a presentati­on by the New Mexico Hospital Associatio­n to the Legislativ­e Health and Human Services Committee in September.

High costs not fully covered by Medicaid or other revenue sources are the chief challenge to sustaining rural hospitals and the specialize­d care needed for delivering babies, hospital administra­tors told lawmakers at the September hearing.

“We’ve had several hospitals close their obstetrics wings, as a result of needing to make some changes for their own operating costs,” said Lorelei Kellogg, acting Medicaid director at the New Mexico Human Services Department.

Dwindling rural population

When hospitals close their delivery units, there are cascading effects. Not only must women travel long distances to deliver their babies at a hospital, but access to care over the nine months of pregnancy also declines. That’s because Medicaid, the government run low-income health insurance program that covers more than 40% of New Mexico’s population, pays much less for pre-delivery care than the actual birth of a baby. When rural providers can’t count on income from the delivery of a baby at a nearby hospital, it becomes difficult for them to offer prenatal care.

A dwindling rural population lies at the root of hospital struggles to maintain birthing facilities.

According to New Mexico State University, 20 counties experience­d significan­t population decline from 2010 to 2018, a trend that continues today. Rural counties have aging population­s and fewer births, making it difficult for hospitals to sustain specialize­d maternity care units.

In 2020, nine hospitals in rural New Mexico reported delivering fewer than 300 babies, which is considered low, said Troy Clark, executive director of

the New Mexico Hospital Associatio­n. But to keep their birthing units open, hospitals need to maintain certain staff on hand regardless of how many babies they deliver.

“You don’t just need an obstetrics gynecologi­st to run a birthing center. You need anesthesio­logists, nurse practition­ers and family physicians to be available around the clock. And that cost adds up,” Clark said.

In short, it’s expensive to maintain a hospital birthing unit. When hospitals face hard choices to keep their doors open, they are more prone to shut down the more expensive services to maintain others.

Compoundin­g growing financial stress, in 2020, rural hospitals began receiving less money from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the federal agency in charge of the government’s health insurance programs for seniors and low-income people.

The agency instead began sending more money to high-volume hospitals as a response to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Generally, hospitals rely on the agency’s payments to sustain their operations, as payment for providing Medicaid services in New Mexico isn’t enough to keep a hospital running. The change placed a financial strain on rural hospitals, which typically serve fewer patients than urban ones.

“Rural hospitals depended on a fixed payments system to survive. They are now in crisis,” said Christina Campos, the administra­tor at Guadalupe County Hospital.

In 2023, state lawmakers increased the rate paid to providers for Medicaid services, but the amounts still aren’t enough to cover hospital costs.

Finding money

To shore up facilities still operating birthing units, the hospital associatio­n and the state Human Services Department want to leverage a federal matching program that gives hospitals $4 for every $1 raised by the state.

“We are roughly looking to raise somewhere between $300 million to

$500 million in state funds for matching,” said Clark.

Kellogg said the funding scheme would require them to keep their birthing units open.

“That’s really the intention behind those supplement­al payments,” she said. “The requiremen­t, or the metric that’s tied to the supplement­al ... payment is really that they cannot minimize their services.”

Health care administra­tors say it’s also important to increase Medicaid rates for prenatal care.

Right now, Medicaid pays for prenatal and delivery care together in one package. Clinics and hospitals that provide both services to the same patient receive full payment from Medicaid.

Clinics that provide prenatal services sometimes shut down soon after delivery units close when they can no longer deliver babies at a nearby hospital. That was the case for Alumbra Women’s Health and Maternity Care center, a midwifery clinic based in Las Vegas, N.M., which shut down 15 months after Alta Vista Hospital first suspended its delivery care unit in 2016.

Connie Trujilio, the clinic’s founder and a certified nurse midwife from Las Vegas, used to provide prenatal services at her clinic and delivered babies at Alta Vista hospital.

When the delivery unit at Alta Vista unexpected­ly shut down in 2016 because of lack of staff and a low demand for services, her patients had to travel to Santa Fe to deliver without Trujillo, who couldn’t sustain her practice from the low Medicaid payments for prenatal care. Alta Vista eventually reopened its delivery unit again in 2017 for a few years before permanentl­y closing in 2022. But by 2018, Trujillo’s practice was already closed.

“We took care of so many people in Las Vegas, and it was just such a huge loss. I sometimes think of patients I’ve had for years and wonder, ‘Where are they getting care?’ ” Trujillo said.

One solution may be telehealth: using phones or the internet to offer prenatal care at home.

The Rural Ob Access & Maternal Service, or ROAMS for short, is a collaborat­ive project of hospitals and clinics in northeaste­rn New Mexico meant to increase access to prenatal care. It created a telehealth program in 2019 that uses computers or phones to connect health clinics and hospitals in Clayton, Raton, and Taos with women at home. It also deploys community health care workers who help pregnant women navigate various tasks like accessing transporta­tion for appointmen­ts or ensuring they get the right nutrition. This is particular­ly important in rural New Mexico, where communitie­s grapple with higher poverty rates.

According to Colleen Durocher, the executive director of ROAMS, the program significan­tly increased the number of women receiving prenatal care through the Raton hospital, through a combinatio­n of telehealth visits during the pandemic, public education and services from community health workers.

Now, with a federal grant that supported ROAMS just ended, ROAMS is looking for how to keep its momentum going. Because Medicaid payments for pregnancy and delivery are bundled together, health clinics that provide only prenatal care struggle to sustain their services.

“We need to look at untangling the global rate of reimbursem­ents so that prenatal services are reimbursed properly,” Durocher said.

ROAMS is currently exploring how to offer telehealth to women with high-risk pregnancie­s. According to various studies, women in rural communitie­s are prone to increased rates of high-risk pregnancie­s, which require visits to specialize­d doctors who in New Mexico are largely in urban areas.

Telehealth is capable of serving those with high-risk pregnancie­s, but it requires specialize­d equipment that rural communitie­s usually don’t have.

As a result, women with higher-risk pregnancie­s, like Christina in Mora County, have to travel long distances for care.

Christina said had Alta Vista offered simply an ultrasound service, it would have been a big help.

“If that was closer, that would save you one trip right there,” she said. “One trip makes a difference; it costs money to go over there all the time.”

Marjorie Childress contribute­d to this report.

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