After A Rural Hospital Closes, Delays In Emergency Care Cost Patients Dearly
The loss of the longtime hospital in Fort Scott, Kan., forces trauma patients to deal with changing services and expectations.

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FORT SCOTT, Kan. â For more than 30 minutes, Robert Findley lay unconscious in the back of an ambulance next to Mercy Hospital Fort Scott on a frigid February morning with paramedics hand-pumping oxygen into his lungs. A helipad sat just across the icy parking lot from the hospitalâs emergency department, which had recently shuttered its doors, like hundreds of rural hospitals nationwide.
Suspecting an intracerebral hemorrhage and knowing the ER was no longer functioning, the paramedics who had arrived at Findleyâs home called for air transport before leaving. For definitive treatment, Findley would need to go to a neurology center located 90 miles north in Kansas City, Mo. The ambulance crew stabilized him as they waited.
But the dispatcher for Air Methods, a private air ambulance company, checked with at least four bases before finding a pilot to accept the flight, according to a 911 tape obtained by Kaiser Health News through a Kansas Open Records Act request.
âMy Nevada crew is not available and my Parsons crew has declined,â the operator tells Fort Scottâs emergency line about a minute after taking the call. Then she says she will be âreaching out toâ another crew.
Nearly seven minutes passed before one was en route.
When Linda Findley sat at her kitchen counter in late May and listened to the 911 tape, she blinked hard: âI didnât know that they could just refuse. ⊠I donât know what to say about that.â
Both Mercy and Air Methods declined to comment on Findleyâs case.
When Mercy Hospital Fort Scott closed at the end of 2018, hospital president Reta Baker had been âabsolutely terrifiedâ about the possibility of not having emergency care for a community where she had raised her children and grandchildren and served as chair of the local Chamber of Commerce. Now, just a week after the ERâs closure, her fears were being tested.

Nationwide, more than 110 rural hospitals have closed since 2010, and in each instance a community struggles to survive in its own way. In Fort Scott, home to 7,800, the loss of its 132-year-old hospital opened by nuns in the 19th century has wrought profound social, emotional and medical consequences. Kaiser Health News and NPR are following Fort Scott for a year to explore deeper national questions about whether small communities need a traditional hospital at all. If not, what would take its place?
Delays in emergency care present some of the thorniest dilemmas for nurses, physicians and emergency workers. Minutes can make the difference between life and death â and seconds can be crucial when it comes to surviving a heart attack, a stroke, an anaphylactic allergic reaction or a complicated birth.
Though air ambulances can transport patients quickly, the dispatch system is not coordinated in many states and regions across the country. And many air ambulance companies do not participate in insurance networks, which leads to bills of tens of thousands of dollars.
Knowing that emergency care was crucial, the hospitalâs owner, St. Louis-based Mercy, agreed to keep Fort Scottâs emergency doors open an extra month past the hospitalâs Dec. 31 closure, to give Baker time to find a temporary operator. A last-minute deal was struck with a hospital about 30 miles away, but the ER still needed to be remodeled and the new operator had to meet regulatory requirements. So, it closed for 18 days â a period that proved perilous.

A Risky Experiment
During that time, Fort Scottâs publicly funded ambulances responded to more than 80 calls for service and drove more than 1,300 miles for patients to get care in other communities.
Across America, rural patients spend âstatistically significantâ more time in an ambulance than urban patients after a hospital closes, said Alison Davis, a professor at the University of Kentuckyâs department of agricultural economics. Davis and research associate SuZanne Troske analyzed thousands of ambulance calls and found the average transport time for a rural patient was 14.2 minutes before a hospital closed; afterward, it increased nearly 77% to 25.1 minutes. For patients over 64, the increase was steeper, nearly doubling.
In Fort Scott this February, the hospitalâs closure meant people didnât âknow what to expect if we come pick them up,â or where they might end up, said Fort Scott paramedic Chris Rosenblad.
Barbara Woodward, 70, slipped on ice outside a downtown Fort Scott business during the early February storm. The former X-ray technician said she knew something was broken. That meant a âbumpyâ and painful 30-mile drive to a nearby town, where she had emergency surgery for a shattered femur, a bone in her thigh.

About 60% of calls to the Fort Scottâs ambulances in early February were transported out of town, according to the log, which KHN requested through the Kansas Open Records Act. The calls include a 41-year-old with chest pain who was taken more than 30 miles to Pittsburg, an unconscious 11-year-old driven 20 miles to Nevada, Mo., and a 19-year-old with a seizure and bleeding eyes escorted nearly 30 miles to Girard, Kan.
Those miles can harm a patientâs health when they are experiencing a traumatic event, Davis said. They also prompt other, less obvious, problems for a community. The travel time keeps the crews absent from serving local needs. Plus, those miles cause expensive emergency vehicles to wear out faster.
Mercy donated its ambulances to the joint city and county emergency operations department. Bourbon County Commissioner Lynne Oharah said heâs not sure how they will pay for upkeep and the buying of future vehicles. Mercy had previously owned and maintained the fleet, but now it falls to the taxpayers to support the crew and ambulances. âThis was dropped on us,â said LeRoy âNickâ Ruhl, also a county commissioner.
Even local law enforcement feel extra pressure when an ER closes down, said Bourbon County Sheriff Bill Martin. Suspects who overdose or suffer split lips and black eyes after a fight need medical attention before getting locked up â that often forces officers to escort them to another community for emergency treatment.
And Bourbon County, with its 14,600 residents, faces the same dwindling tax base as most of rural America. , about 3.4% fewer people live in the county compared with nearly a decade ago. Before the hospital closed, Bourbon County paid Mercy $316,000 annually for emergency medical services. In April, commissioners approved an annual $1 million budget item to oversee ambulances and staffing, which the city of Fort Scott agreed to operate.
In order to make up the nearly $700,000 difference in the budget, Oharah said, the county is counting on the ambulances to transport patients to hospitals. The transports are essential because ambulance services get better reimbursement from Medicare and private insurers when they take patients to a hospital as compared with treating patients at home or at an accident scene.

Added Response Times
For time-sensitive emergencies, Fort Scottâs 911 dispatch calls go to Air Methods, one of the largest for-profit air ambulance providers in the U.S. It has a base 20 miles away in Nevada, Mo., and another base in Parsons, Kan., about 60 miles away.
The companyâs central communications hub, known as AirCom, in Omaha, Neb., gathers initial details of an incident before contacting the pilot at the nearest base to confirm response, said Megan Smith, a spokeswoman for the company. The entire process happens in less than five minutes, Smith said in an emailed statement.
When asked how quickly the helicopter arrived for Robert Findley, Bourbon County EMS Director Robert Leisure said he was âunsure of the time the crew waited at the pad.â But, he added, âthe wait time was very minimal.â
Rural communities nationwide are increasingly dependent on air ambulances as local hospitals close, said Rick Sherlock, president of the Association of Air Medical Services, an industry group that represents the air ambulance industry. AAMS estimates that nearly 85 million Americans rely on the mostly hospital-based and private industry to reach a high-level trauma center within 60 minutes, or what the industry calls the âgolden hour.â
In June, when Sherlock to Congress about high-priced air ambulance billing, he pointed to Fort Scott as a devastated rural community where air service âhelped fill the gap in rural health care.â
But, as Findleyâs case shows, the gap is often difficult to fill. After Air Methodsâ two bases failed to accept the flight, the AirCom operator called at least two more before finding a ride for the patient.
The 1978 Airline Deregulation Act states that airline companies cannot be regulated on ârates, routes, or services,â a provision originally meant to ensure that commercial flights could move efficiently between states. Today, in practice, that means air ambulances have no mandated response times, there are no requirements that the closest aircraft will come, and they arenât legally obligated to say why a flight was declined.
The air ambulance industry has faced years of scrutiny over accidents, including investigations by the and stricter rules from the . And Air Methodsâ Smith said the company does not publicly report on why flights are turned down because âwe donât want pilots to feel pressured to fly in unsafe conditions.â
Yet a lack of accountability can lead to mostly for-profit providers sometimes putting profits first, Scott Winston, Virginiaâs assistant director of emergency medical services, wrote in an email. Air ambulances can be delayed because of bad weather or crew fatigue from previous runs.
Or sometimes companies accept a call knowing their closest aircraft is unavailable, rather than lose the business. âThis could result in added response time,â he wrote.
Air ambulances donât face the detailed reporting requirements imposed on ground ambulances. The National Emergency Medical Services Information System collects only about 50% of air ambulance events because the industryâs private operators voluntarily provide the information.

Saving Lives
It took months, but Baker persuaded Ascension Via Christiâs Pittsburg hospital, which sits 30 miles south of Fort Scott, to reopen the ER. âThey kind of were at a point of desperation,â said Randy Cason, president of Pittsburgâs hospital. The two Catholic health systems signed a two-year agreement, leaving Fort Scott relieved but nervous about the long term.
Ascension has said it is looking at potential facilities in the area, but itâs unclear what that means. Fort Scott Economic Development Director Rachel Pruitt said in a July 23 email, âNo decisions have been made.â Fort Scott City Manager Dave Martin said the city has entered into a ânondisclosure agreementâ with Ascension to look into the health systemâs ability to continue offering health care to Fort Scott, though Martin could not confirm whether that included an emergency department.
Nancy Dickey, executive director of the Texas A&M Rural & Community Health Institute, said every community prioritizes emergency services. Thatâs because the âfirst hour appears to be vitally important in terms of outcomes,â she said.
And the Fort Scott ER, which reopened under Ascension on Feb. 18, has proved its value. So far, in the past six months, Ascensionâs Fort Scott emergency department has taken care of more than 2,500 patients, including delivering three babies. In May, a city ambulance crew had resuscitated a heart attack patient at his home and Ascensionâs emergency department staff treated the patient until an air ambulance arrived.
In July, Fort Scottâs Deputy Fire Chief Dave Bruner read a note from that patientâs grateful wife at a city commission meeting: âThey gave my husband the chance to fight long enough to get to Freeman ICU. As a nurse, I know the odds of Kevin surviving the âwidow makerâ were very poor. You all made the difference.â
By contrast, Linda Findley believes the local paramedics did everything possible to save her husband but wonders how the lack of an ER and the air ambulance delays might have changed her husbandâs outcome. After being flown to Kansas City, Robert Findley died.
This is the third installment in KHNâs year-long series, , which follows how the closure of one beloved rural hospital disrupts a communityâs health care, economy and equilibrium.