Prairie Doc: Quality Rural Health Care with Less Burnout

Date:

Dr. Richard Holm, MD

By Richard P. Holm, MD

The elderly patient came back to our rural hospital from a hospital in a nearby larger city after having had major surgery and feeding-tube placement. The care from the bigger hospital was superb except that the patient was getting too much nutrient and fluids and was a bit “overloaded.” Also, the family was concerned that perhaps they had been too aggressive in getting stressful surgery for their elderly mom, whose memory had begun to slip. As her physician, I cut back on the feeding-tube supplements, stopped the intravenous fluids, provided a little diuretic and did labs and X-ray for dementia. I took plenty of time with family and patient learning about their wishes should our patient again deteriorate. All agreed to emphasize comfort from here on out, and if she started to fail, we would do our best in her home hospital and not transfer her care again.

I had been that patient’s primary care doc for years. Practicing outpatient and inpatient care in a smaller town gave me the experience to see what was happening. The patient and family knew me, trusted me and appreciated the time I spent listening to her. Quality care reviewers, government oversight people and insurance companies also know the value of a well-trained rural primary care provider who not only understands how to care for complex patients, but also, knows when and where to refer when specialized care is needed. In fact, experts believe an ideal system would define a primary care provider for every person.

Unfortunately, there are not enough rural primary care docs. Many speculate as to why this is; however, I believe the need has resulted from misinformed med students and residents who think the lifestyle in rural America is not satisfying enough. In the July 2019 issue of South Dakota Medicine, a survey of family physicians practicing in this state found much lower burnout rates in family docs practicing in rural areas (25 percent) compared with those practicing in larger metropolitan areas (51 percent). Evidently, some social aspects of rural practice seem to confer a protective effect against burnout. This new data should be helpful when young physicians are looking for the most satisfying places to practice.

My elderly patient went home in about a week, happy with our community hospital and the care she received. Her doctor was also pleased, as he had the reward of successful care, the honor of satisfied family and the joy of truly helping someone while practicing in a rural setting.

Richard P. Holm, MD is founder of The Prairie Doc® and author of “Life’s Final Season, A Guide for Aging and Dying with Grace” available on Amazon. For free and easy access to the entire Prairie Doc® library, visit www.prairiedoc.org and follow Prairie Doc® on Facebook featuring On Call with the Prairie Doc® a medical Q&A show streaming on Facebook and broadcast on SDPTV most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central.

Share post:

spot_img

Related articles

Prairie Doc: The Science Behind Understanding Epidemics

By Richard P. Holm, MD It was in London, England, 1854, when a severe diarrhea illness caused the deaths...

Prairie Doc: Opioids: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Richard P. Holm, MD My patient was in severe pain, suffering from an obstruction in his gastrointestinal tract as...

Prairie Doc: Kindness in Medicine

By Richard P. Holm, MD This week I spent some time exploring the origins of the word, kind: It...

Noise Induced Hearing Loss…What’s That?

By Richard P. Holm, MD Of the 40 million people with hearing loss in the U.S., 25 percent of...

Log In

Latest articles

Sue says that fostering kids has enriched her life

By Garrick A. Moritz, Gazette Sue Christiansen has been a foster caregiver for 37 years and taken in somewhere...

Tooth and Tail

Get ready for sword fights, magic and adventure at GHS Friday & Sunday This week Friday and Sunday, audiences...

GHS FFA is walking tall after high marks at state contests

BROOKINGS, S.D. – While the Garretson FFA as a whole is still riding high from the State FFA,...

Golf takes flight with Early Bird Tournament

By Kelsey Buchholz, Coach The Blue Dragon Golf team officially kicked off their season last week hosting the Garretson Early...

Dragons downed by Padres

The Garretson Blue Dragon Baseball team headed to Corsica on Monday to take on the MVPCS Padres, and...

Commissioners speculate on increase to highway department wheel tax

By Dave Baumeister County Correspondent SIOUX FALLS – When Minnehaha County Highway Superintendent Jacob Maras gave the annual report for...
s2Member®