LETTER: Rural Healthcare Gets Slammed

As a Family Medicine doctor who has worked in rural Colorado throughout my 33 year career, I am very concerned about the future health of the families I have cared for. Hundreds of rural communities are about to lose their local hospitals. Since 2005, 166 rural hospitals have shuttered, with a third of rural hospitals in the danger zone. Bad debt for rural hospitals has gone up about 50% since 2010.

The financial health of rural hospitals depends largely on the insurance status of patients. The math is simple — hospitals that treat uninsured patients must absorb the cost of uncompensated care. On top of that, administrative costs eat up about a quarter of rural hospitals’ budgets, largely due to the billing requirements of dozens of different insurers. The current economic crisis in which hospitals have had to stop all non-essential procedures and surgeries has caused hospitals to lose much needed income.

But under single-payer Medicare for All, every patient who walks in the door would be covered for all medically necessary care. Even better, Medicare for All would end the archaic fee-for-service payment model, a system that punishes hospitals that don’t have a consistent flow of patients. Instead, we would fund hospitals through annual “global budgets” that are based on community health needs, not patient insurance status or corporate profits.

Medicare for All is the lifeline that rural Americans and our community hospitals need and deserve.

Joan A Maceachen MD
Durango, CO

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