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Can Freestanding ERs Replace Rural America's Struggling Hospitals? It's Complicated

A sign on the door of the shuttered hospital in Ellington, Missouri lists the nearest facilities with functional emergency rooms and how far away they are by car.
Bram Sable-Smith
/
KBIA/Side Effects Public Media
A sign on the door of the shuttered hospital in Ellington, Missouri lists the nearest facilities with functional emergency rooms and how far away they are by car.

When the hospital closed in rural Ellington, Missouri, a town of about 1,000, the community lost its only emergency room, too. 

That was 2016. That same year, a local farmer had a heart attack.

鈥淗e was a young man. He was just in his 50s,鈥 said Christy Roberts, president of the Ellington Chamber of Commerce. Though the farmer lived just five minutes from the shuttered Ellington hospital, he had to be transported to an emergency room in Poplar Bluff, a 60-mile drive on winding one lane highways. He didn鈥檛 make it.

鈥淏y the time he got there, there just wasn鈥檛 enough that they could do for him. His heart was too damaged,鈥 Roberts said. 鈥淲e really do feel like people have passed away because we did not have those emergency services.鈥

of rural hospitals lose money each year due to dwindling community populations and a patient base that鈥檚 older, poorer and sicker than most. As a result, about 700 rural communities across the country are at risk of losing their hospitals, and access to emergency services. have closed since 2010, leaving towns like Ellington scrambling to fill the health care void.

One solution could be to run small, freestanding emergency rooms in these small towns. But as community leaders in Ellington found out, that鈥檚 not so simple.

An overburdened clinic

On a chilly afternoon four days before Christmas, Karen White circled the outside of the empty hospital building in Ellington. White is CEO of the only medical practice left in Ellington, a primary care clinic that sees patients on a sliding scale fee.

Christy Roberts is president of the Ellington Chamber of Commerce and administrator at Roberts Pallet Company in Ellington, Missouri.
Credit Bram Sable-Smith / KBIA/Side Effects Public Media
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KBIA/Side Effects Public Media
Christy Roberts is president of the Ellington Chamber of Commerce and administrator at Roberts Pallet Company in Ellington, Missouri.

White pointed to the old emergency department entrance on the side of the building. A sign on the door reads "This facility is closed. Emergency care is available at these locations..." and gives the distance and drive times to the two nearest emergency rooms: Iron County Hospital (48 minutes driving time), and Poplar Bluff Regional Medical Center (1 hour 10 minutes).

鈥淚t鈥檚 a requirement when a facility closes that they have to post where the next nearest facility would be, and the drive time and mileage,鈥 White said.

When the hospital closed, her clinic took on a lot of the medical care load in the county 鈥 including emergency cases. Patients have shown up in the clinic mid-stroke and mid-heart attack, she said.

It鈥檚 been difficult. Her staff were not prepared for such a dramatic increase in volume. The clinic鈥檚 primary care physician left under the stress.

鈥淪he really felt the weight being the only doctor in the county,鈥 White said. There鈥檚 no full-time physician in Ellington anymore.

White can staff her primary care clinic with nurse practitioners 鈥 and she does 鈥 but it doesn鈥檛 change the fact that many of the clients who show up there should be going to an ER. They just often can鈥檛 get to one in time.

So White started wondering about logistics of opening an ER by itself in the community. It鈥檚 a concept known as a 鈥渇reestanding ER,鈥 an idea introduced in the 1970s as a way to maintain access to emergency services in rural areas. Communities have tried the concept in other parts of the country, including neighboring Kansas and Illinois. And to White, it seemed like the perfect idea for Ellington.

鈥淎nyone you talk to in the community, we want our hospital back. But if we can鈥檛 have our hospital back, can we at least have an ER?鈥 White said.

Regulatory hurdles

Priya Bathija of the American Hospital Association said rural health care providers are changing how they deliver health care. They can offer more specialized services now than they used to be able to. There鈥檚 less need for overnight stays and more demand for outpatient and emergency care.

However, despite the changes, 鈥渁 lot of our laws and regulations have not accounted for that," Bathija said.

Freestanding ERs are not recognized on the federal level, meaning they can鈥檛 bill Medicare for services. Unless that changes, there鈥檚 no federal money to support freestanding emergency departments. Without federal money, these facilities pop up in places that can sustain them, which is urban areas, not rural ones.

Thus, even though they were originally proposed as a concept for solving the rural access problem, the majority of the roughly freestanding ERs in America right now are located in cities.

Karen White examines the roof of the shuttered hospital in Ellington, Missouri. She says if the hospital were to be reopened its roof would likely need to be replaced.
Credit Bram Sable-Smith / KBIA/Side Effects Public Media
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KBIA/Side Effects Public Media
Karen White examines the roof of the shuttered hospital in Ellington, Missouri. She says if the hospital were to be reopened its roof would likely need to be replaced.

Freestanding ERs have garnered a lot of criticism in Texas, which has more than 180. The ERs have a reputation for issuing surprisingly expensive bills, and have even been blamed for driving up regional health care costs. But most of Texas鈥檚 facilities were built to be alternative options in crowded urban health care markets like Houston, Dallas and San Antonio.

In a rural town such as Ellington, however, the only choice could be between a freestanding ER and nothing.

But each state regulates the facilities differently (if they regulate them at all), which poses a different set of challenges. For instance, requires freestanding ERs to treat every patient that comes in the door regardless of insurance status, the way hospital emergency departments do.

And when Karen White looked into the possibility of a freestanding emergency room in Ellington, she found out that Missouri does not allow them at all. It鈥檚 a rule she said the state needs to revisit.

鈥淟ook at everything that has been lost. Look at all of the hospitals that have closed. How many of those could have transitioned over to emergency medical centers and still been operational? That鈥檚 the question they need to ask,鈥 White said. 

For now, she said the community will look for ways to reopen Ellington鈥檚 hospital. It鈥檚 the only way to bring emergency services back to town.

This story was produced by , a news collaborative covering public health.

Bram Sable-Smith is reporting this series during a yearlong Reporting Fellowship on Health Care Performance sponsored by the Association of Health Care Journalists and supported by The Commonwealth Fund. This story is part five in series on rural hospitals. Read parts , ,  and .

Copyright 2021 Side Effects Public Media. To see more, visit .

Bram Sable-Smith is a native Missourian and a reporter on the KBIA Health & Wealth Desk. He鈥檚 documented mbira musicians in Zimbabwe, mining protests in Chile, and a lobstering union in Maine. His reporting from Ferguson, Missouri won a regional Edward R. Murrow award for feature reporting. Bram cut his radio chops at the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies in Portland, Maine.
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