Addressing Rural Healthcare ‘Pain Points’
Dr. Jay Anders has witnessed firsthand “the decline of rural healthcare in America.”
“The hospital where I first became interested in medicine is now half its original size, merged with a larger health system, and struggling to stay afloat,” Anders wrote for KevinMD.com. “This story is all too common across rural America, where health care access is becoming increasingly scarce, and the challenges for providers are mounting.”
Registered nurses, nurse practitioners, advanced practice registered nurses, and nurse anesthetists all are employed at lower ratios in rural areas versus urban areas, according to the Rural Health Information Hub (RHIH).
Anders considers access to care, financial constraints, and struggles with providing high-quality services “a trifecta of pain points” in rural America. He suggested that policy interventions, such as loan forgiveness and increased state and federal funding, and technology opportunities like telemedicine and AI tools, would help alleviate the issues.
Expanding at-home care in rural communities could also address “long-standing access issues,” according to a July 2024 HealthTech report by Brian Doerr, senior vice president of IT and security and privacy officer at Community Hospital Corp.
After meeting certain requirements like IT infrastructure and Centers for Medicare and Medicare Services (CMS) credentialling, Doerr argues that the following services could be offered in a home setting:
- Inpatient care
- Outpatient therapy
- Primary care
- Infusion services
![Rural nursing](https://nursingcecentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Rural-Nursing-2.png)