55% of rural hospitals don’t offer obstetric care: Report

More than half of rural hospitals in the U.S. do not offer labor and delivery services, according to a new report from the Center for Healthcare Quality & Payment Reform.

Advertisement

The policy center analyzed obstetrical unit closures at rural hospitals nationwide through this January. 

Three takeaways:  

1. More than 200 rural hospitals have stopped delivering infants over the last decade amid serious financial and workforce challenges. 

2. In 10 states, more than two-third of hospitals don’t offer obstetrical care: Nevada, North Dakota, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Illinois, Virginia, and West Virginia. 

3. For 70% of patients living in a rural area, the average travel time to a hospital with labor and delivery services is 30 minutes or more. In contrast, nearly 90% of patients in urban areas are less than 30 minutes away from the nearest hospital with obstetrical care.

View the full report here.

Advertisement

Next Up in Care Coordination

Advertisement

Comments are closed.