As
the rural town of Fort Scott, Kan., grapples with the closure of its hospital,
cancer patients face new challenges as they try to continue their treatments in
different locations.
By Sarah Jane
Tribble JULY 1, 2019
FORT SCOTT, Kan. — One Monday in February, 65-year-old Karen
Endicott-Coyan gripped the wheel of her black 2014 Ford Taurus with both hands
as she made the hour-long drive from her farm near Fort Scott to Chanute. With
a rare form of multiple myeloma, she requires weekly chemotherapy injections to
keep the cancer at bay.
She made the trip in pain, having skipped her morphine for the
day to be able to drive safely. Since she sometimes “gets the pukes” after
treatment, she had her neighbor and friend Shirley Palmer, 76, come along to
drive her back.
Continuity of care is crucial for cancer patients in the midst
of treatment, which often requires frequent repeated outpatient visits. So when
Mercy Hospital Fort Scott, the rural hospital in Endicott-Coyan’s hometown, was
slated to close its doors at the end of 2018, hospital officials had arranged
for its cancer clinic — called the “Unit of Hope” — to remain open.
Then “I got the email on Jan. 15,” said Reta Baker, the
hospital’s CEO. It informed her that Cancer Center of Kansas, the contractor that
operated and staffed the unit, had decided to shut it down too, just two weeks
later.
“There are too many changes in that town” to keep the cancer
center open, Yoosaf “Abe” Abraham, chief operating officer of the Cancer Center
of Kansas, later told KHN. He added that patients would be “OK” because they
could get treated at the center’s offices in Chanute and Parsons.
From Fort Scott, those facilities are 50 and 63 miles away,
respectively.
For Endicott-Coyan and dozens of other cancer patients, the
distance meant new challenges getting lifesaving treatment. “You have a flat
tire, and there is nothing out here,” Endicott-Coyan said, waving her arm
toward the open sky and the pastures dotted with black Angus and white-faced
Hereford cattle on either side of the shoulderless, narrow highway she now must
drive to get to her chemo appointment.
Nationwide, more than 100 rural hospitals have
closed since 2010. In each case, a unique but familiar loss occurs.
Residents, of course, lose health care services as wards are shut and doctors
and nurses begin to move away.
But the ripple effect can be equally devastating. The economic
vitality of a community takes a blow without the hospital’s high-paying jobs
and it becomes more difficult for other industries to attract workers who want
to live in a town with a hospital. Whatever remains is at risk of withering
without the support of the stabilizing institution.
The 7,800 residents of Fort Scott are reeling from the loss of
their 132-year-old community hospital that was closed at the end of December by
Mercy, a St. Louis-based nonprofit health system. Founded on the frontier in
the 19thcentury and rebuilt into a 69-bed modern facility in 2002,
the hospital had outlived its use, with largely empty inpatient beds, the
parent company said. For the next year, Kaiser Health News and NPR will track
how its citizens fare after the closure in the hopes of answering pressing
national questions: Do citizens in small communities like Fort Scott need a
traditional hospital for their health needs? If not a hospital, what then?

Traveling The Distance For Cancer Care
Reta Baker, the hospital’s president who grew up on a farm south
of Fort Scott, understood that the hospital’s closure was unavoidable. She
scrambled to make sure basic health care needs would be met. Mercy agreed to
keep the building open and lights on until 2021. And Baker recruited a
federally qualified health center to take over four outpatient clinics,
including one inside the hospital; former employees were bought out and
continue to operate a rehabilitation center; and the nonprofit Ascension Via Christi Hospital in
Pittsburg reopened the emergency department in February.
As Fort Scott deals with the trauma of losing a beloved
institution, deeper national questions underlie the struggle: Do small, rural
communities need a traditional hospital at all? And if not, how will they get
the health care they need?
But cancer care in rural areas, which requires specialists and
the purchase and storage of a range of oncology drugs, presents unique
challenges.
Rural cancer patients typically spend 66% more time traveling
each way to treatment than those who live in more urban areas, according to a
recent national survey by ASCO, the American Society of Clinical
Oncology. Dr. Monica Bertagnolli,
a cattle rancher’s daughter who is now chair of ASCO’s board, called this a
“tremendous burden.” Cancer care, she explained, is “not just one visit and
you’re done.”
ASCO used federal data to find that while about 19% of Americans
live in rural areas, only 7% of oncologists
practice there.
People in rural America are more likely to die from cancer than
those in the country’s metropolitan counties, according to a Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention report in 2017. It found
180 cancer deaths per 100,000 people a year in rural counties, compared with
158 deaths per 100,000 in populous metropolitan counties.
The discrepancy is partly because habits like smoking are more
common among rural residents, but the risk of dying goes beyond that, said Jane
Henley, a CDC epidemiologist and lead author of the report. “We know
geography can affect your risk factors, but we don’t expect it to affect
mortality.”
From an office inside a former Mercy outpatient clinic, Fort
Scott’s cancer support group, Care to Share, continues its efforts to meet some
of the community’s needs — which in some ways have increased since the Unit of
Hope closed. It provides Ensure nutritional supplements, gas vouchers and
emotional support to cancer patients.
Lavetta Simmons, one of the support group’s founders, said she
will have to raise more money to help people pay for gas so they can drive
farther to treatments. Last year, in this impoverished corner of southeastern
Kansas, Care to Share spent more than $17,000 providing gas money to area
residents who had to travel to the Mercy hospital or farther away for care.
The group expects to spend more on gas this year, having spent
nearly $6,000 during the first four months of 2019.
And the reserves of donated Ensure from Mercy are running out,
so Simmons is reaching out to hospitals in nearby counties for help.
With Mercy Hospital Fort Scott closed, the likelihood of
residents here dying from their cancer will grow, experts worry, because it’s
that much harder to access specialists and treatments.
Krista Postai, who took over the Fort Scott hospital’s four
primary care clinics, said it’s not unusual for her staff to “see someone walk
in [with] end-stage cancer that they put off because they didn’t have money,
they didn’t have insurance, or it’s just the way you are. … We wait too long
here.”
‘If They Can’t Cure Me, I’m Done’
Art Terry, 71, a farmer and Vietnam veteran, was one of them.
Doctors discovered Terry’s cancer after he broke a rib while baling hay. When
they found a mass below his armpit, it was already late-stage breast cancer
that had metastasized to his bones.
With his twice-weekly chemotherapy treatment available in the
“Unit of Hope,” Terry spent hours there with his son and grandchildren telling
stories and jokes as if they were in their own living room. The nurses began to
feel like family, and Terry brought them fresh eggs from his farm.
“Dad couldn’t have better or more personalized care anywhere,”
said his son, Dwight, bleary-eyed after a factory shift.
Terry knew it was difficult to find trustworthy cancer care. The
shortage of cancer specialists in southeastern Kansas meant that many,
including Mercy Hospital Fort Scott’s patients, counted on traveling
oncologists to visit their communities once or twice a week.
Wichita-based Cancer Center of Kansas has nearly two dozen
locations statewide. It began leasing space in Fort Scott’s hospital basement
in the mid-2000s, the center’s Abraham said. The hospital provided the staff
while the Cancer Center of Kansas paid rent and sent roving oncologists to drop
in and treat patients.
At its closing, the Unit of Hope served nearly 200 patients,
with about 40% of them on chemotherapy treatment.
When Art Terry was diagnosed, his son tried to talk to him about
seeking treatment at the bigger hospitals and academic centers in Joplin, Mo.,
or the Kansas City area. The elder Terry wasn’t interested. “He’s like,
‘Nope,’” Dwight Terry recalled. “I’m going right there to Fort Scott. If they
can’t cure me, I’m done. I’m not driving.’”
In the end, as the elder Terry struggled to stay alive, Dwight
Terry said he would have driven his father the hour to Chanute for treatment.
Gas — already a mounting expense as they traveled the 20 miles from the farm
near tiny Prescott, Kan., to Fort Scott — would be even more costly. And the
journey would be taxing for his father, who traveled so little over the course
of his life that he had visited Kansas City only twice in the past 25 years.
As it turned out, the family never had to make a choice. Art
Terry’s cancer advanced to his brain and killed him days before the hospital’s
cancer unit closed.
What Happens Next?
As Endicott-Coyan and her friend Palmer drove to Chanute for
treatment, they passed the time chatting about how the hospital’s closure is
changing Fort Scott. “People started putting their houses up for sale,” Palmer
said.
Like many in Fort Scott, they had both spent their days at the
Fort Scott hospital. Endicott-Coyan worked in administration for more than 23
years; Palmer volunteered with the auxiliary for six years.
The hospital grew with the community. But as the town’s fortunes
fell, it’s perhaps no surprise that the hospital couldn’t survive. But the
intertwined history of Mercy and Fort Scott is also why its loss hit so many
residents so hard.
Fort Scott began in 1842 when the U.S. government built a
military fort to help with the nation’s westward expansion. Historians say Fort
Scott was a boomtown in the years just after the Civil War, with its recorded
population rising to more than 10,000 as the town competed with Kansas City to
become the largest railroad center west of the Mississippi. The hospital was an
integral part of the community after Sisters of Mercy nuns opened a 10-bed
hospital in 1886 with a mission to serve the needy and poor. Baker, Mercy
Hospital Fort Scott’s president, said the cancer center was an extension of
that mission.
The Unit of Hope began operating out of the newest hospital
building’s basement, which was “pretty cramped,” Baker said. As cancer
treatments improved, it grew so rapidly that Mercy executives moved it to a
spacious first-floor location that had previously been the business offices.
“Our whole purpose when we designed it was for it to be a place
where somebody who was coming to have something unpleasant done could actually
feel pampered and be in a nice environment,” Baker said.
The center, with its muted natural grays and browns, had windows
overlooking the front parking lot and forested land beyond. Every patient could
look out the windows or watch their personal television terminal, and each
treatment chair had plenty of space for family members to pull up chairs.
When Endicott-Coyan and Palmer arrived at the Cancer Center of
Kansas clinic in Chanute in February, things looked starkly different. Patients
entered a small room through a rusted back door. Three brown infusion chairs
sat on either side of the entry door and two television monitors were mounted
high on the walls. A nurse checked Endicott-Coyan’s blood pressure and ushered
her back to a private room to get a shot in her stomach. She was ready to leave
about 15 minutes later.
The center’s Abraham said the Chanute facility is “good for
patients for the time being” and not a “Taj Mahal” like Mercy’s Fort Scott
hospital building, which he said was too expensive to maintain. Cancer Center
of Kansas plans to open a clinic at a hospital in Girard, which is about 30
miles from Fort Scott, he said.
Some oncology doctors would say driving is not necessary.
Indeed, a few health care systems across the country, such as Sanford Health in
South Dakota and Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals in Pennsylvania, are
administering some chemotherapy in patients’ homes. Oncologist Adam Binder, who
practices at Thomas Jefferson in Philadelphia, said “over 50% of chemotherapy
would be safe to administer in the home setting if the right infrastructure
existed.”
But the infrastructure — that is, the nurses who would travel to
treat patients and a reimbursement model to pay for such care within our
complex health care system — is not yet in place.
Back in the car, Palmer took the wheel and Endicott-Coyan began
planning for future cancer treatments in the void left by Mercy Hospital Fort
Scott’s closure. “I put a note on Facebook today and said, ‘OK, I have drivers
for the rest of February; I need drivers for March!’”
This is
the second installment in KHN’s year-long series, No Mercy,
which follows how the closure of one beloved rural hospital disrupts a
community’s health care, economy and equilibrium.
https://khn.org/news/have-cancer-must-travel-patients-left-in-lurch-after-hospital-closes/?utm_campaign=KFF-2019-The-Latest&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=74321708&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-80h7xPzCPSCIsSY6IM9c7H9mB19awVIBId3UgE_Pa25HTah1RzlT3aj6l55xRnveKjQZxiqIxddjEaSkJ6lKZWsVYTRA&_hsmi=74321708
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