The Columbus Dispatch

Experts: Early storms might become more common

State has experience­d 18 tornadoes so far in 2024

- Bailey Gallion Columbus Dispatch USA TODAY NETWORK

After a deadly late-winter tornado devastated parts of central Ohio, meteorolog­ists warn that tornado season hasn’t even started and that these powerful early storms might become more common in coming years.

Ohioans experience­d 18 tornadoes so far in 2024, the most on record this early in the year, according to the National Weather Service, eight of which touched down in central Ohio.

Three people died in an EF-3 tornado in Logan County, and damage was reported in Auglaize, Mercer, Darke, Miami, Union, Delaware, Licking, Hancock, Crawford and Richland counties.

Gov. Mike Dewine announced Thursday that teams from the Federal Emergency Management Agency will conduct damage assessment­s in the 11 counties affected by the storms to determine the need for additional assistance The National Weather Service recently surveyed damage via helicopter, but meteorolog­ists do not expect additional tornadoes to be confirmed, National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Logan Clark said in an interview Thursday.

Clark said the next 7-10 days should have little risk of tornado activity due to slightly cooler-than-average temperatur­es. But Ohio still hasn’t reached its peak severe weather season, which

Availabili­ty of doctors’ offices, hospitals and emergency rooms vary by population, and lower-populated rural areas may not be able to financiall­y support quality health care services, the study found. As a result, experts say too many rural hospitals are closing because they can’t cover their costs.

Since 2005, 192 rural hospitals have closed or converted their services to outpatient or other models, according to the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Another 600 rural hospitals are at risk of closing, according to the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform, a Pittsburgh-based nonprofit think tank.

This “health care crisis” in rural areas is something Tom Campanella, a health care executive in residence at Baldwin Wallace University in Berea, Ohio, and others have been sounding the alarm about for years.

“We still seem to be sleeping through the rural health care crisis. … Hopefully it’s a wake-up call,” he said of the study.

Why are rural Ohioans dying sooner than others?

Dr. Lucy Bucher, an OB-GYN and associate vice president for clinical affairs at Ohiohealth O’bleness Hospital in Athens, said she’s felt like patients are sicker than they’ve ever been.

“It’s shocking because we’re really looking at a young population,” she said. “When they say there was this big change in mortality, it really fell in that mid-20s to mid-50s range.”

Bucher sees chronic illnesses affecting her patients often and believes residents’ health worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic, with many delaying medical care when offices were closed to prevent the spread of the illness.

Shei Sanchez, 45, is not surprised people in rural America aren’t living as long. Sanchez has lived in rural Athens County for 10 years and works for a group that funds health nonprofits in rural Ohio and West Virginia.

Too often people delay going to the doctor because they don’t have the money and think their concerns are minor, she said, but those very same issues compound into more serious health conditions later on. They may also have to make the tough choice of putting food on the table or paying for gas to get to a doctor, she said.

A rural lifestyle can also be allaround unhealthie­r because people have less access to places to get physical activity, like safe places to walk and healthy foods to eat, Sanchez said. And rural Americans are also more likely to smoke, be obese and not have a primary care doctor, according to the study.

Additional­ly, telehealth, which expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic, may not be an option for a lot of rural residents who can’t access broadband internet.

People with poor health may work

“We still seem to be sleeping through the rural health care crisis. … Hopefully it’s a wake-up call.” Tom Campanella Health care executive in residence at Baldwin Wallace University, speaking about the study

fewer days, be less productive when working or have an overall lower quality of life, which have effects larger than the individual’s health, according to the report.

What can be done about the rural mortality gap in Ohio?

Community health workers like Mariah Sharpe, who works at Ohiohealth’s Castrop Health Center in Athens, can play a key role in improving rural Ohioans’ health, Campanella said.

Often, they are trusted in the communitie­s they live and work in and can then help address health care and quality of life for fellow residents, he said.

“We’re kind of like a neighbor or even a friend or distant family member that’s done this 1,000 times,” Sharpe said. “We know how to quickly get you resources or services, and we’re here to be as involved or uninvolved as you need us.”

Sharpe helps connect patients to resources like food, transporta­tion, items to care for their newborns and more.

“We just try to bridge all these gaps,” she said, adding she talks to new parents about safe sleep and can help them access clothing, bottles, blankets and car seats. “We need to do everything we can to make sure mom and baby are safe.”

But there are some things the Athens health center can’t do — such as help people with certain heart and maternal fetal medicine issues — and going to Columbus is difficult for many southeaste­rn Ohio residents, she said.

Among possible solutions to the mortality gap, Campanella said collaborat­ion among government and health care companies is important.

For instance, in July, Memorial Health System in Marietta announced it would build southeast Ohio’s only women and children’s hospital as part of a partnershi­p with Akron Children’s Hospital with $30 million in state funding. The announceme­nt came on the heels of many Ohio maternity wards closing.

Federally qualified health centers — which receive federal grants and are set up to care for underserve­d population­s — also need to be expanded and their services broadened, Campanella said. Telehealth services should be made more accessible. And more residencie­s for doctors should be available in rural areas because doctors often stay where they did their residency.

People should be angry about the gap in mortality rates and demand action, Campanella said. “The sad part is, it’s not only not getting better, it’s getting worse,” he said. “These are people who have been long neglected.”

 ?? DORAL CHENOWETH/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Cleanup efforts are underway around Lakeview after a powerful tornado on March 14 killed three people and injured dozens in the Indian Lake area.
DORAL CHENOWETH/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Cleanup efforts are underway around Lakeview after a powerful tornado on March 14 killed three people and injured dozens in the Indian Lake area.
 ?? ?? Sharpe holds a food kit that is part of the offerings given to new mothers as part of their donation program at the Castrop Health Center. The kit does not require heat in order to prepare the meal.
Sharpe holds a food kit that is part of the offerings given to new mothers as part of their donation program at the Castrop Health Center. The kit does not require heat in order to prepare the meal.
 ?? PHOTOS BY BROOKE LAVALLEY/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Community health worker Mariah Sharpe holds a onesie that is part of the offerings given to new mothers as part of their donation program on Friday at the Castrop Health Center.
PHOTOS BY BROOKE LAVALLEY/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Community health worker Mariah Sharpe holds a onesie that is part of the offerings given to new mothers as part of their donation program on Friday at the Castrop Health Center.

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