The Commercial Appeal

How to solve TN’S rural health care crisis

As the U.S. Senate Rural Health Caucus co-chair, I rolled out a multi-part health care agenda to ensure rural areas can gain access to the health care they deserve.

- Your Turn Hal Lawton Guest columnist

Every parent knows the sinking feeling that hits when your child drops from the monkey bars or when a grandparen­t can’t get up from a fall. For families in rural areas, that sense of worry is immediatel­y followed by the risk of not getsince ting medical care in time.

Through phone calls with friends and virtual meetings, I hear from Tennessean­s in rural areas who were struggling to access health care even before the pandemic.

It’s a grim reality that many Americans have to drive hours through remote areas to find emergency medical care. If they make it in time, they find overcrowde­d facilities filled with the COVID-19 patients urban hospitals are funneling into rural areas.

The rural health care crisis is not only anecdotal. For those who live in rural areas, the average distance to care has increased more than 600% in the past eight years, according to a December 2020 report from the United States Government Accountabi­lity Office.

In Tennessee, that increase is the result of rapid, statewide hospital closures. In the past seven years alone, 12 hospitals that reached underserve­d communitie­s shut their doors. That’s a staggering number of closures considerin­g the state of Tennessee only has about that same number of Critical Access Hospitals remaining.

While the status of rural health care already looks bleak, the problem is worsening with the lingering pandemic. Rural areas receive less access to the testing and vaccinatio­n programs that are getting urban areas back to work and attract fewer doctors and nurses to practice in the community after they complete their training.

Families living in rural Tennessee need a solution.

As the U.S. Senate Rural Health Caucus co-chair, I am uniquely positioned to lead the charge. Recently, I rolled out a multi-part health care agenda to ensure rural areas can gain access to the health care they deserve.

As part of this agenda, I introduced legislatio­n that incentiviz­es doctors to live and work in their local community instead of moving to a larger city.

The bipartisan legislativ­e plan also returns fair Medicare funding to rural communitie­s and includes a proposal to work with the White House on prioritizi­ng rural health care advocacy alongside the attorney general and Department of Health and Human Services.

While my work on Capitol Hill has brought the concerns of rural Americans into the legislativ­e conversati­on, I know that our mission is far from over. Tennessee’s doctors, nurses, and scientists are working tirelessly to manage COVID’S impact on rural health, but our hospitals and health care facilities are still overwhelme­d.

As we enter a new phase of coronaviru­s recovery, parents will still worry when medical emergencie­s happen. But, I remain dedicated to championin­g the demand for rural health care and hopeful that comparable access can become a reality.

Marsha Blackburn, R-brentwood, is Tennessee’s senior U.S. senator.

 ?? SHELLEY MAYS/THE TENNESSEAN ?? Mayor of Ducktown Mayor Doug Collins stands in the doorway of a room where hospital beds have been stored inside town's shuttered hospital in Ducktown, Tennessee on Dec. 5, 2018. Copper Basin Medical Center closed due to mounting debt.
SHELLEY MAYS/THE TENNESSEAN Mayor of Ducktown Mayor Doug Collins stands in the doorway of a room where hospital beds have been stored inside town's shuttered hospital in Ducktown, Tennessee on Dec. 5, 2018. Copper Basin Medical Center closed due to mounting debt.
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