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The Midwest Newsroom is a partnership between NPR and member stations to provide investigative journalism and in-depth reporting.

Rural Midwest communities that lose their hospitals have few health care options

More than 130 rural hospitals in the U.S. have closed over the past decade. Dozens of those closures happened in the Midwest.
Nick Youngson
/
Pix4free.org
More than 130 rural hospitals in the U.S. have closed over the past decade. Dozens of those closures happened in the Midwest.

In many rural towns, local hospitals are community fixtures. When they close, the entire community feels the ripple effects.

A half-dozen Gouldian finches greet patients with their chirps from a cage in the waiting room of the Boone Health Primary Care clinic in Mexico, Missouri. The birds belong to Dr. Peggy Barjenbruch who, alongside Dr. Michael Quinlan, has served the Mexico community for decades.

That looked like it might come to an end this past fall, when the hospital they were associated with, Audrain Community Hospital, closed suddenly.

Audrain Community Hospital was a community fixture since its founding in the 1980s, but in September it joined a growing list of rural hospital closures. More than 130 rural hospitals in the U.S. have closed over the past decade. Dozens of those closures happened in the Midwest, including 10 in Missouri, amid the pressure of shrinking populations and lower reimbursement for care due to uninsured patients.

In many rural towns, local hospitals are community fixtures. When they close, the entire community feels the ripple effects, and access to critical health care is put in jeopardy. For Barjenbruch and Quinlan, the closure brought uncertainty.

“We always thought that we were big enough to keep on going," Quinlan said.

Patients in a tough spot

Quinlan, a Mexico native, grew up with the hospital at the heart of the Mexico community. It closed shortly after changing ownership for the second time in two years. Noble Health Corporation, based in Kansas City, Missouri, had acquired the hospital in 2021.

Dr. Michael Quinlan has practiced medicine in Mexico, Missouri, for decades, but the hospital his clinic was associated with closed in September. The closure of the local hospital means the nearest option for emergency care and other inpatient services is 40 miles away.
Sebastian Martinez Valdivia
/
KBIA
Dr. Michael Quinlan has practiced medicine in Mexico, Missouri, for decades, but the hospital his clinic was associated with closed in September. The closure of the local hospital means the nearest option for emergency care and other inpatient services is 40 miles away.

After increasing internal turmoil at the company, Noble sold the hospital to Texas-based Platinum Team Management, which shuttered the facility. Quinlan said toward the end, staff were working without pay to keep serving the community.

In the wake of the closure, the Audrain County health department had to scramble, setting up a phone line to answer patient questions, said CEO Craig Brace.

“We had a nurse dedicated to dig into those questions and find answers and make that available," Brace said.

But some of those questions didn’t have easy answers. The closure of the local hospital means the nearest option for emergency care and other inpatient services is 40 miles away, in Columbia.

Quinlan said that’s left his patients in a difficult situation.

“You’ll hear some mornings that, ‘Oh I had chest pain at 2 a.m. and I just was waiting to see if I could see you guys,” he said. “ ... We don’t want to take a chance on that.”

Patients have also put off important appointments like cancer screenings, Quinlan said, holding out hope that the hospital will reopen.

There’s no sign of that happening soon, but other providers have moved in. MU Health opened two clinics in Mexico in the summer, including an urgent care center. And Boone Health acquired Quinlan’s outpatientclinic in October.

Boone Health CEO Troy Greer found benefits in the move for both his health system and the community.

Boone Health CEO Troy Greer made the move to acquire a clinic in Mexico, Missouri, following the Audrain Community Hospital's closure.
Sebastian Martinez Valdivia
/
KBIA
Boone Health CEO Troy Greer made the move to acquire a clinic in Mexico, Missouri, following the Audrain Community Hospital's closure.

"It allows Boone to continue to grow in those areas to serve their needs, but also [creates] a more convenient place for those people to use Boone services,” Greer said.

But stepping in to run the hospital, isn’t something Boone or any other institution is in a position to do, according to Greer.

Hard to replace

One option for emergency care that has proliferated in other states is the freestanding ER — an emergency department that's not attached to a hospital. Freestanding ERs can often provide faster care than traditional ERs, but can also come with higher price tags.

While much of the freestanding ER wave has come in suburban areas, they may be an option for rural towns as well, said Dr. Cedric Dark, an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the Baylor college of Medicine in Houston who studies freestanding ERs.

"When we’re talking about rural hospital closures, I feel like you at least ought to be able to keep the ER open as a freestanding ER because people in those communities still need access to emergency care,” Dark said.

Regulations in several states, including Missouri, effectively ban freestanding ERs. According to the Missouri Hospital Association, the state does not recognize or license freestanding ERs.

That means communities like Mexico have to find other ways to keep their hospitals open, whether that be through private equity firms or individual investors.

Quinlan and Brace had been hopeful about a potential investor who had expressed interest in reopening the hospital. But according to Quinlan, Platinum recently sold the property to another buyer.

Instead, Quinlan said the recently enacted federal rural emergency hospital designation is a consideration. That would allow the hospital to reopen its emergency department and provide outpatient care.

However, Quinlan said there are also plans drawn up to open a micro-hospital at a different location – offering emergency services and some inpatient care – if Audrain Community doesn’t re-open.

This story comes from a collaboration between KBIA, Side Effects Public Media, based at WFYI, and the Midwest Newsroom — an investigative journalism collaboration including IPR, KCUR 89.3, Nebraska Public Media News, St. Louis Public Radioand NPR.

Sebastián Martínez Valdivia is a health reporter and documentary filmmaker who focuses on access to care in rural and immigrant communities. A native Spanish speaker and lifelong Missouri resident, Sebastián is interested in the often overlooked and under-covered world of immigrant life in the rural midwest. He has a bachelor's degree in broadcast journalism from the University of Missouri and a master's degree in documentary journalism at the same institution. Aside from public health, his other interests include conservation, climate change and ecology.
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