Commentary: Rural health care in America — Fraught, but fixable

By JOANNE M. CONROY, SUNNY EAPPEN and ANDREW T. MUELLER

To the Valley News

Published: 06-21-2023 3:33 PM

Joanne M. Conroy, MD, is CEO and president of Dartmouth Health, based in Lebanon. Sunny Eappen, MD, MBA, is president and CEO of the University of Vermont Health Network, based in Burlington. Andrew T. Mueller, MD, is CEO of MaineHealth, based in Portland, Maine.

About 70% of U.S. hospitals lost money in 2022, with health care providers and systems continuing to be hammered by increasing labor costs, inflation, supply chain interruptions, market turbulence and other factors.

In rural America, especially here in northern New England and northern New York, the current health care landscape is especially difficult to navigate on behalf of the communities we serve. Of the top five reasons people die in America — heart disease and stroke, pulmonary disease, car accidents, firearms, and cancer — mortality rates for all of them are higher in rural areas.

In addition, our region does not have a traditional structure of state-run public health departments. In Maine and New Hampshire, counties have no such infrastructure at all. Instead, our health systems are the safety net providers for our states while also providing public health support.

As leaders of the region’s three academic health systems, we are joining together to highlight the challenges facing rural healthcare the innovations that give us hope, and what we need to preserve and improve access to care now and in the future.

Who we are as a region:

■We’re small — The total population of our three New England states — just under 3.5 million — is less than the Boston metropolitan area.

■We’re aging — Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont are the three oldest states in the nation.

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■We’re geographically varied — From rural Northern New York and Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom, to the busy southern tier of New Hampshire, up to quiet Presque Isle in Maine, the differences in environment and infrastructure are striking.

■We’re sick — Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont were in the top 15 states for opioid overdose death rates in 2019, with rates increasing since. We also have high numbers of adults reporting serious mental illness.

Academic health systems are anchor institutions in the regions we serve. We provide specialty and sub-specialty patient care while educating and training the next generation of providers and medical researchers. We’re also each of our states’ largest private employers, creating jobs that pay competitively and stimulate our economies.

As nonprofit organizations, we’re not beholden to shareholders. Our narrow margins are invested right back into our people, buildings, equipment and programs. In recent years, unacceptably low rates of public payer reimbursement, and the hodgepodge system of negotiating reimbursement rates with individual commercial payers, have led to shrinking margins that have caused all of us to reassess important projects and attempt to get back on track financially.

If we are impacted to the point that we have to reduce services, the people who depend on us may not be able to access care when and where they need it, which will ripple into our communities economically and socially.

The American health care system was suffering long before COVID-19. But the pandemic amplified and multiplied the challenges. Based on what we are now seeing, especially in rural hospitals and health systems like ours, the worst may be yet to come.

It doesn’t have to be this way.

We do see a bright light in the face of this turmoil: an opportunity to make truly positive lasting change while we chart a path forward. It starts with innovation. We must:

■Get creative with the way we deploy our talented workforces, allowing our physicians, nurses, and all of our staff to work at their highest level.

■Harness rapidly developing technologies, advancing telehealth to make scheduling appointments and getting answers easier for patients and providers.

■Lead the way as diverse, equitable and vibrant organizations, not only reflecting the communities we serve, but also creating exceptionally welcoming work environments.

■Continue to shift our care models to emphasize prevention, mental health, primary care, and treating chronic illnesses.

These are just a few of the ways we can preserve and improve access to health care in our region — but we cannot do all this alone. We need our local, state and federal leaders to help make changes that:

■Ensure government and commercial payers reimburse us at levels that fully reflect the cost and complexity of the high-quality care we provide.

■Modernize the way we train the next generation of providers, getting more of them in the pipeline early, and helping them finance their educations.

■Help our talented employees find housing, so we can recruit and retain them.

Despite the challenges we’re facing, we’re optimistic about what rural health care could look like in our four-state region — but only if we get the support we need from local, state and federal governments, insurers, and other stakeholders.

Our patients expect — and deserve — nothing less.

Drs. Conroy, Eappen and Mueller participated in a “CEO Roundtable” on May 22, addressing many of the issues addressed in this piece. To see the full one-hour conversation visit https://youtube.com/live/37eDGdQ2pnI