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Subjects: Conference, Survey

New Chartis Study Explores Rural Hospital Instability and Models Potential Impact of Rural Emergency Hospital Designation


Chartis, a comprehensive healthcare advisory firm, today published a new study examining the stability of rural hospitals, the potential impact of the Rural Hospital Emergency (REH) designation and dwindling access to care in rural communities. Findings from "Rural Health Safety Net Under Renewed Pressure as Pandemic Fades," will be shared with members of Congress, rural healthcare advocates and state offices of rural health as part of the National Rural Health Association's 34th annual Rural Health Policy Institute Conference.

"As the urgency of the pandemic disappears, the return of policy-driven reimbursement cuts, population health disparities and the nurse staffing crisis will apply renewed pressure to the rural health safety net," said Michael Topchik, National Leader of The Chartis Center for Rural Health. "For some hospitals, our data model suggests the REH designation will serve as a desperately needed relief valve to avoid closing and provide a significant reversal in fortune for the vulnerable communities they serve. But the decision to convert is highly nuanced and as a result, we expect to see a relatively small number of hospitals embrace REH."

Since 2010, 143 rural hospitals have closed and Chartis research shows that another 453 are vulnerable to closure. Even in communities in which hospital doors remain open, access to vital healthcare services and care such as obstetrics (OB) and chemotherapy is vanishing. These conditions portend to worsening community health status in areas where gaps in disparities measures between rural and urban remain persistent. For those invested in rural healthcare, this latest study provides an updated lens into the uncertainty and instability across the rural health safety net. Key findings from this study include:

"Even if the number of hospitals converting to REH is small, this new designation nonetheless represents momentum toward solutions capable of averting more closures and retaining services in these already vulnerable communities. Hopefully we can build upon this momentum before the instability accelerates again," added Topchik.

Resources

The study, "Rural Health Safety Net Under Renewed Pressure as Pandemic Fades" can be read HERE.

Michael Topchik will be discussing the findings of this new study and Chartis' REH data modeling during a session at the National Rural Health Association's Rural Health Policy Institute Conference on Tuesday, February 7 at 1:30 p.m. ET.

About Chartis

Chartis is a comprehensive healthcare advisory firm dedicated to helping clients build a healthier world. We work across the healthcare continuum with more than 600 clients annually, including providers, payers, health services organizations, technology and retail companies, and investors. Through times of change, challenge, and opportunity, we advise the industry on how to navigate disruption, pursue growth, achieve financial sustainability, unleash technology, improve care models and operations, enhance clinical quality and safety, and advance health equity. The teams we convene bring deep industry expertise and industry leading innovation, enabling clients to achieve transformational results and create positive societal impact. Learn more.



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