Relentless Health Value

EP338: Ideas to Meet Rural Healthcare’s Tough Challenges, With Nikki King, DHA

Informações:

Sinopsis

My overarching thought throughout a lot of this interview was that improving rural health will take everyone remembering to not let perfect be the enemy of the good. If I live in rural America, there’s no subspecialists. Forget about even seeing a garden-variety kind of specialist. I might have to drive hours to even get to a PCP. There are NPs (nurse practitioners) in a lot of these remote communities, but everybody’s fighting over whether to let them practice independently, even in places where there’s zero PCPs for hundreds of miles, effectively leaving everyone in the vicinity with basically zero access to any care. Or here’s another issue: Maternal mortality in this country is not only heartbreaking—a mother dying in what should be a precious moment—it’s also embarrassing as an industrialized nation to be so far in last place. I don’t know this for a fact, really, but women who have to drive literally hours to see a provider during their pregnancy or—God forbid!—they go into labor unexpectedly … is that