Current:Home > StocksAlabama birthing units are closing to save money and get funding. Some say babies are at risk -Quantum Capital Pro
Alabama birthing units are closing to save money and get funding. Some say babies are at risk
SignalHub View
Date:2025-04-07 06:12:15
GROVE HILL, Ala. (AP) — One of the last remaining birthing units in southern Alabama will close next month to qualify for federal funding that will save the hospital’s emergency services, but doctors warn the move may cost newborns and pregnant women essential access to obstetric care.
Nestled in rural Clarke County, the small, nonprofit Grove Hill Memorial Hospital will discontinue its labor and delivery services in mid-August, the governing board announced earlier this month.
The board said closure was necessary for the hospital to qualify for much needed federal funding that is designated for rural emergency hospitals, defined as facilities with fewer than 50 beds that provide 24/7 emergency care and no inpatient services, including obstetrics.
But the federal funding comes at a steep cost. The closure marks the fourth labor and delivery unit to close statewide in less than a year, including a facility in a neighboring county that referred many patients to Grove Hill after closing in November.
In the coming months, a large part of southern Alabama will no longer have close access to hospital obstetric delivery services.
Dr. Max Rogers, the obstetrician-gynecologist who runs the labor and delivery unit at Grove Hill Memorial, sees an average of 300 women a month and delivers 10 to 15 babies. Rogers said the lack of local care could put some mothers and babies at risk.
“I used to say that outcomes are gonna be worse,” Rogers said. “And that’s a nice, polite euphemism for babies are going to die and mothers are going to die in emergency rooms because of a lack of prenatal care and a lack of obstetrical care.”
This would apply to a small but significant fraction of births involving serious complications. Although emergency rooms are equipped to handle the vast majority of normal births, some conditions require rapid transportation to a facility with a doctor qualified to operate on pregnant women, Rogers said.
Anna Retic, 26, has been driving 45 minutes from her home near Pine Hill to Grove Hill for all seven months of her pregnancy because it was the closest facility offering both birthing and prenatal services.
She considered herself lucky. She works as a bank teller and is able to take time off to make the trip to her monthly appointments, which were scheduled to increase to once every two weeks as her October delivery date gets closer.
Now, the closest option for her to give birth is a hospital almost twice as far away.
“It’s crazy,” Retic said. “If you’re in labor, you have to rush two hours away, you might have that baby in the car. I don’t know. I pray that doesn’t happen to me.”
Alabama’s delivery health outcomes already lag far behind the rest of the country. One study found Alabama had a maternal mortality rate of 64.63 deaths per 100,000 births between 2018 and 2021, nearly double the national rate of 34.09 per 100,000 births. That jumps to 100.07 deaths for Black women in the state.
Rural hospitals have struggled to maintain labor and delivery units for decades. Experts cite declining births, low Medicaid reimbursement and staffing shortages as significant causes of financial decline.
But some of the strain is more particular to Alabama, which is one of 10 states nationally that has not expanded Medicaid.
Dr. Donald Williamson, president of the Alabama Health Association, said a major challenge for rural hospitals in the region is a significant number of patients that come through the front door are uninsured.
The expansion of Medicaid would improve reimbursements and hospital revenue, Williamson said, and until then he expects more hospitals across the state to make the same difficult decision made at Grove Hill.
Nationwide, 28 hospitals have converted to the rural emergency designation since the program was rolled out in 2023, according to the University of North Carolina’s Sheps Center for Health Services Research. But Grove Hill will be the first that will have to close a labor and delivery unit to become a rural emergency hospital, according to the National Rural Health Association.
While the program has offered a unique lifeline to rural hospitals on the brink of collapse, experts and legislators have warned it might come at the cost of essential services like inpatient psychiatric or other rehabilitative care.
U.S. Senators Jerry Moran, a Republican from Kansas, and Tina Smith, a Democrat from Minnesota, introduced legislation in May to allow rural emergency hospitals to maintain some inpatient services, including obstetrics.
Ultimately, Rogers in Grove Hill said he supports the conversion to a rural emergency hospital, even if the change means closing the obstetrics department where he has formed close relationships with many patients. He believes it is the hospital’s only financial option and important in maintaining emergency services.
Still, Rogers has significant concerns about the future of the federal program.
“Every single one of us needs to understand that while this REH status may protect a lot of rural hospitals, it’s coming with a price. And that’s what I don’t want everybody to gloss over,” he said.
___
Safiyah Riddle is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
veryGood! (899)
Related
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Baltimore Archdiocese says it will file for bankruptcy before new law on abuse lawsuits takes effect
- Lego moves in another direction after finding plastic bottle prototype won't reduce emissions
- Jimmy Carter admirers across generations celebrate the former president’s 99th birthday
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Israeli soldiers kill a Palestinian man in West Bank, saying he threw explosives
- Virginia man wins $500,000 from scratch-off game: 'I don't usually jump up and down'
- Thousands of cantaloupes recalled over salmonella concerns
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Prominent Egyptian political activist and acclaimed academic dies at 85
Ranking
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- The Flying Scotsman locomotive collided with another train in Scotland. Several people were injured
- Syrian Kurdish fighters backed by US troops say they’ve captured a senior Islamic State militant
- Rocker bassinets potentially deadly for babies, safety regulator warns
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Why Kendall Jenner Is Scared to Have Kids
- Federal judge rejects requests by 3 Trump co-defendants in Georgia case, Cathy Latham, David Shafer, Shawn Still, to move their trials
- Jon Rahm responds to Brooks Koepka's accusation that he acted 'like a child' at the Ryder Cup
Recommendation
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Dad who won appeal in college admissions bribery case gets 6 months home confinement for tax offense
Group of homeless people sues Portland, Oregon, over new daytime camping ban
An arrest has been made in Tupac Shakur’s killing. Here’s what we know about the case and the rapper
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Arizona’s governor didn’t ‘mysteriously’ step down. She was in DC less than a day and is back now
Who is Duane 'Keefe D' Davis? What to know about man arrested in Tupac Shakur's killing
Horoscopes Today, September 29, 2023