Health Care in Rural Georgia
February 19, 2020
by Janice Fisher
The term “two Georgias” originated as an economic distinction, contrasting the state’s
metropolitan areas and its rural communities (108 of Georgia’s 159 counties are defined
as rural). But today, it also describes growing and systemic disparities in health
and health care. Data from a wide array of sources sketch the picture in numbers;
discussions with four PCOM alumni physicians who work in Georgia add shading and texture
to a complicated landscape.
Rural Georgia: A “health penalty”
Rural Georgians disproportionately experience poor health outcomes—“higher death rates
due to heart disease, stroke, cancer and motor vehicle accidents; higher rates of
smoking; increased prevalence of chronic conditions such as diabetes; and an epidemic
of adverse maternal and child health outcomes, including teen births and low birthweight
babies,” according to Gary Nelson, PhD, president of the Healthcare Georgia Foundation.
In a 2016 invited editorial in the Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association,
Dr. Nelson declared, “There is a significant health penalty for living in rural Georgia.”
Many rural Georgians have limited access to affordable, quality health care. Increasing
numbers lack insurance, with an estimated 55 rural counties having uninsured rates
above the state average. Aging populations face increased difficulty in traveling
for their medical care. Reinforcing these trends: shortages in the healthcare workforce
across multiple disciplines.
The need for physicians
The Georgia Board of Health Care Workforce, which tracks physician supply and demand,
found 22,471 physicians licensed and actively practicing in Georgia during the period
from January 2017 to December 2018. The overall statewide rate of 213.6 physicians
per 100,000 population lagged the national average of 301.1. But more critically,
the distribution of Georgia’s physicians was profoundly lopsided, with almost half
of them taking care of a quarter of the population. Specifically, almost half worked
in the top 10 of the state’s 96 Primary Care Service Areas—self-sufficient markets
of primary care—which together accounted for 27 percent of Georgia’s population.
The most dramatic shortfalls resulted in areas with no physicians whatsoever. For
the 2017-18 period examined, nine counties—encompassing a population of almost 40,000—had
no physicians at all. With a focus on specialties, the numbers are as daunting. Eighteen
counties (with a combined population of over 120,000) had no family medical physicians;
32 counties (combined population over 350,000), no internal medicine physicians; 60
counties (population over 800,000), no pediatricians; 76 counties (population over
1 million), no OB/GYNs; and 77 counties (population over 1.2 million), no psychiatrists.
Trends showed similar patterns for primary care physicians, nurses and physician assistants,
according to a 2016 report from the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute.
In the PSCAs ranked by the Georgia Board of Health Care Workforce at the bottom for
physician coverage, Jenkins County in Southeast Georgia and Hancock County in Central
Georgia each had a single physician per 100,000 population, and Brooks County in Southern
Georgia had three. Their physician rates per 100,000 were about 19, 19, and 12, respectively.
By way of comparison, the number one and number two ranked PSCAs in the state, Fulton
County (Atlanta Metro) and Lincoln-Columbia-Richmond County (Augusta), both had physician
rates of about 460 per 100,000.
Physician shortages are shaped in part by trends in the percentage of doctors nearing
retirement age and the proportion of medical residents nearing the end of their education.
The Senior List, an online resource of senior care-related information, ranks each
state according to its likelihood of experiencing a physician shortfall, in light
of these patterns and the current physician workforce in each state. Based primarily
on 2016 data, Georgia was ranked the 14th most likely state to see a doctor shortage
in the coming years.
In 2017, Georgia’s State Office of Rural Health (SORH), a division of the Georgia
Department of Community Health, found that 89 counties did not have enough doctors
to treat people living in those areas. Rural Georgians were described as less healthy
than those living in urban areas, more likely to be underinsured or uninsured, and
more likely to suffer from heart disease, obesity, diabetes and cancer.
The Commonwealth Fund, a private U.S. foundation that supports independent research
on healthcare issues, ranked Georgia 42nd in state healthcare system performance in
2019, measured through standardized scores on more than 40 performance indicators
in four categories: access and affordability, prevention and treatment, potentially
avoidable hospital use and health habits of residents. The report noted that healthcare
prices across the state are high and that almost two in five Georgians are considered
low income.
Also in 2019, America’s Health Rankings, a project of the United Health Foundation
in partnership with the American Public Health Association, ranked Georgia 40th among
states, based on a historical and comprehensive set of health, environmental and socioeconomic
data. (The five lowest-ranked states were Nevada, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas and
Mississippi.)
The care of women and children
America’s Health Ranking’s 2019 Health of Women and Children Report found that Georgia
was one of eight states that saw significant increases in child mortality since 2016.
Georgia’s 12 percent increase was double the nationwide increase of six percent.
A 2018 report from the March of Dimes categorized 37 percent of Georgia counties as
“maternity care deserts”—areas that lack options for pregnant women. Fifty-eight counties,
according to the report, had no obstetric providers or hospitals offering obstetric
care. “About 60 percent of all the cases of maternal mortality, meaning women that
die as a result of pregnancy and childbirth, are avoidable,” said March of Dimes president
Stacey Stewart, because they stem from chronic illnesses such as cardiovascular disease
or diabetes that could be managed with proper health care during pregnancy.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for the period 2011–2015,
17.2 women per 100,000 nationwide died of pregnancy-related problems. Georgia’s rate
was the highest in the nation, at 46.2 per 100,000. For black women in Georgia, that
rate was 66.6, vs. 27.3 for white women.
Alumni in the trenches:
Valerie Sherrer, MS ’13/Biomed, DO ’17
Valerie Sherrer, MS ’13/Biomed, DO ’17, is completing her residency at Georgia South
Family Medicine in Moultrie, Georgia. In June, she’ll join a family practice in Enterprise,
Georgia, and care for families she grew up with. “Enterprise and Moultrie both need
more doctors, especially family physicians,” says Dr. Sherrer.
Moultrie “is fortunate to have a variety of specialists,” she says, “but for super-specialists,
we refer patients to Tallahassee or Macon.” Macon is 2.5–3 hours away and Tallahassee
1.5 hours—but, Dr. Sherrer points out, with the travel time there and back, plus the
appointment, “you’re not going to work that day.”
Dr. Sherrer’s Moultrie patients are “hardworking people—migrant workers, farmers,
small factory workers. ... We often hear, ‘I can’t get that done because I’d have
to take a day off from work and then I can’t feed my family.’ Or they come in with
what they think is a cold or a stomach bug, but their blood pressure is 200/120 or
their blood sugar is 500. When they leave, we have to make sure they’re set to receive
continued care for problems they were not even aware of.”
For most patients in both Moultrie and Enterprise, says Dr. Sherrer, “Paying hundreds
of dollars in copays for medicine is not doable.” A truck driver with poorly controlled
diabetes “can’t be on insulin, because of his job. He’s trying hard, working with
the medications he can afford.”
As a resident, Dr. Sherrer “takes care of moms and their obstetric care and then delivers
babies and may take care of them, too, and the baby’s siblings. ... I won’t be doing
OB in Enterprise, and I’ll miss it.” But, she says, “I will be taking care of people
who knew me as a little girl.”
Stephanie T. Reese, MS/Biomed ’05, DO ’10
When Stephanie T. Reese, MS/Biomed ’05, DO ’10, was looking for her first postresidency
job, the Mayo Clinic Health System had just opened a campus in Waycross, a Southeast
Georgia town. Only one of her colleagues had ever heard of Waycross. “There’s one
road in and one road out,” he told her. Dr. Reese worked there in the Division of
Primary Care for two years.
“The area didn’t have a lot of coverage,” she recalls. “We were isolated. ... We took
on a lot of the indigent care in the area, and most people didn’t have insurance.
Or their Medicare insurance might tie them to care in Florida.”
When the Mayo Clinic left Waycross, Dr. Reese relocated to Effingham County, practicing
outpatient family medicine in the Effingham Health System in Rincon.
“Effingham’s easternmost area includes Savannah,” Dr. Reese notes, “but the farther
west you go, the more rural it is. The hospital where I am on call has 25 beds and
a nursing home attached—no ICU. We have limited resources, and very few specialists.
... Some folks with diabetes have to go Waycross for hematology—that’s a three-hour
drive.”
Because parents face challenges in getting their children to physicians, “they might
work an hour away from where their kids go to school, and they can’t take off.” Dr.
Reese helped start Effingham Health TELEMED, the first such program in the Greater
Savannah region, which allows elementary school students to be seen a doctor via a
live camera. “We did PR in the schools,” says Dr. Reese. “We got teachers and staff
involved; we plan to move on to junior high.”
Andrew C. Bowe, MS/Biomed ’03, DO ’07
Andrew C. Bowe, MS/Biomed ’03, DO ’07, spent five years as a neonatologist with the
Pediatrix Medical Group of Georgia in Macon. In a high-acuity, level 3 neonatal ICU,
he cared for babies “with extreme prematurity—22-23 weeks’ gestation—up to full-term
infants and those who need mechanical ventilation, nitrous oxide, total body cooling
or any type of pediatric surgery.
“The variety and acuity of presentations,” he says, “were similar to what I’d seen
before. The biggest difference is that the lack of resources in Central and South
Georgia tends to create sicker and more premature babies.”
Dr. Bowe notes that “with premature births, worse outcomes can be related to where
you’re born. In an area with poor access to an OB, poor financial resources, we see
a lot of families that have difficulties with transportation. Some families have significant
language barriers, which tend to play a role in how well a baby does.”
The NICU provided coverage from Valdosta to Milledgeville—“pretty much from the very
bottom of Georgia all the way up past the center of the state,” Dr. Bowe explains.
There might be a call about a baby born at a hospital with no delivery services. Or
a baby needing subspecialist care might arrive from a level 2 NICU. One South Georgia
region has no pediatric surgeon, and Dr. Bowe’s group covered a number of their pediatric
surgery cases.
At the end of 2019, Dr. Bowe joined Spartanburg Regional Health in South Carolina.
In his years at Macon, he saw several families and mothers “a second or third time
in the neonatal ICU. So it was extremely rewarding work, but extremely draining. You
have to love what you do.”
William D. Stembridge, DO ’12, FACOS
William D. Stembridge, DO ’12, FACOS, who grew up not far from PCOM Georgia (Suwanee)
is a general surgeon at Sterling Physician Group/Colquitt Regional Medical Center
in Moultrie, Georgia. He is a vascular and bariatric specialist, but “it feels nice
to do a little bit of everything,” he says of his work.
“I might be on call on the weekend and take care of a pediatric surgical patient or
a trauma evaluation. It keeps me well rounded. ... We feel like we’re taking care
of our community. I know the patients and families; I know all the family physicians
who refer to me.“
“Our patients want to receive their care here,” says Dr. Stembridge, “and that drives
us to expand our services. For example, we’re adding radiation oncology to our hospital,
because patients with cancer don’t want to have to drive somewhere else or move out
of town for six months. They want to stay at home.”
About 15 months into his practice, Dr. Stembridge has seen “just about everything
that you’d see at a university medical center.” What’s more, he adds, “We take care
of a lot of patients who are uninsured or have the most baseline insurance, or don’t
know they should have been taking care of something regularly, so they may come in
with more advanced stages of disease.”
“Lots of my colleagues,” says Dr. Stembridge, whose residency and fellowship were
in New Jersey and Maryland, respectively, “got trained somewhere else, like me, and
then came back. We had ties to this town. It’s personal.”
About Digest Magazine
Digest, the magazine for alumni and friends of Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine,
is published by the Office of Marketing and Communications. The magazine reports on
osteopathic and other professional trends of interest to alumni of the College’s Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) and graduate programs at PCOM, PCOM Georgia and PCOM South Georgia.