Culture

Closing of rural hospitals leaves towns with unhealthy real estate


McKenzie Regional Hospital found new life after it closed in...

Taylor Sisk | KFF Health News (TNS)

JELLICO, Tenn. — In March 2021, this town of about 2,000 residents in the hills of east Tennessee lost its hospital, a 54-bed acute care facility. Campbell County, where Jellico is located, ranks 90th of Tennessee’s 95 counties in health outcomes and has a poverty rate almost double the national average, so losing its health care cornerstone sent ripple effects through the region.

“Oh, my word,” said Tawnya Brock, a health care quality manager and a Jellico resident. “That hospital was not only the health care lifeline to this community. Economically and socially, it was the center of the community.”

Since 2010, 149 rural hospitals in the United States have either closed or stopped providing in-patient care, according to the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina. Tennessee has recorded the second-most closures of any state, with 15, and the most closures per capita. Texas has the highest number of rural hospital closures, with 25.

Each time a hospital closes there are health care and economic ripples across a community. When Jellico Medical Center closed, some 300 jobs went with it. Restaurants and other small businesses in Jellico also have gone under, said Brock, who is a member of the Rural Health Association of Tennessee’s legislative committee. And the town must contend with the empty husk of a hospital.

Dozens of small communities are grappling with what to do with hospitals that have closed. Sheps Center researchers have found that while a closure negatively affects the local economy, those effects can be softened if the building is converted to another type of health care facility.

In Jellico, the town owns the building that housed the medical center, and Mayor Sandy Terry said it is in decent condition. But the last operator, Indiana-based Boa Vida Healthcare, holds the license to operate a medical facility there and has yet to announce its plans for the building, leaving Jellico in limbo. Terry said local officials are talking with health care providers that have expressed interest in reopening the hospital. That’s their preferred option. Jellico does not have a Plan B.

McKenzie Regional Hospital found new life after it closed in 2018. Baptist Memorial Health Care, which operates a hospital in nearby Huntingdon, bought the assets and donated the building to the town of McKenzie. Cachengo, a technology company, took over the space. Jill Holland, McKenzie’s former mayor, believes the town can become a technology hub. “It’s opening a lot of doors of opportunity for the youth in the community,” Holland says. (Taylor Sisk/KFF Health News/TNS)

Sandy Terry, the mayor of Jellico, Tennessee, says local officials are talking with entities that have expressed interest in reopening the Jellico Medical Center, which closed in March 2021. (Taylor Sisk/KFF Health News/TNS)

In June 2019, Florida-based Rennova Health suddenly shuttered the Jamestown Regional Medical Center in Fentress County, Tennessee. County Executive Jimmy Johnson says Rennova’s exit from Jamestown was so abrupt that “the beds were all made up …read more

Source:: The Mercury News – Entertainment

      

(Visited 11 times, 3 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *