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Rural hospitals struggle to stay afloat

Photo by Bryan Thompson Phillips County Hospital in Phillipsburg is one of 84 designated critical access hospitals in Kansas. - \
Photo by Bryan Thompson Phillips County Hospital in Phillipsburg is one of 84 designated critical access hospitals in Kansas. –

By Bryan Thompson

There are a lot of small, rural hospitals in Kansas. Without them, many Kansans would have to travel long distances for care. What’s more, in many small towns, the hospital is one of the largest employers — making it vital to the local economy.

But declining populations, combined with changes in the way hospitals are paid for their services, are making it more difficult for many small hospitals to survive.

There is at least one hospital in 96 of the state’s 105 counties, according to Melissa Hungerford, senior vice president for health care leadership at the Kansas Hospital Association and chief executive officer of the Kansas Hospital Education and Research Foundation.

“Our state has a lot of rural hospitals, a lot of critical access hospitals,” Hungerford said. With 84 critical access hospitals, Kansas has the most in the country, she said.

Medicare introduced the critical access hospital designation in 1997 to help preserve access to health care in rural areas. By federal law, critical access hospitals can’t have more than 25 beds, must offer around-the-clock emergency room services and must keep patients an average of no more than four days.

To help these hospitals survive, Hungerford said, Medicare reimburses them based on their actual costs.

“They used to receive from Medicare 101 percent of their Medicare-allowable costs,” she said. “Sequestration took 2 percent, so critical access hospitals are receiving 99 percent of their allowable costs, and what’s allowable and not allowable is changing.” Those changes are making life tougher on small hospitals, said Jodi Schmidt, president of the National Rural Health Assocation.

“There are some basic things you would expect to have in a hospital, like television sets and telephones, that Medicare does not consider allowable costs,” Schmidt said.

“And then there are a number of physician costs outside of the emergency room and other sorts of operational overhead expense that the government doesn’t consider allowable.” But even with the changes, she said, Medicare pays generously compared to what hospitals are able to collect from patients — largely the working poor — who have no insurance at all. “Quite frankly, for patients who are responsible for their own bills, it may be 7 cents on the dollar that a hospital receives for the care of that patient,” Schmidt said.

“So, when you have a growing number of uninsured like we do here in Kansas, those are patients for whom the critical access hospitals do not receive that cost-based reimbursement.”

Schmidt said it would help if Kansas would expand Medicaid eligibility, as envisioned in the Affordable Care Act. Despite an aggressive lobbying campaign by hospitals, Gov. Sam Brownback and legislative leaders have refused to take that step.

Dwindling numbers of patients also are a problem. Nationwide, critical access hospitals average fewer than five patients per day. The combination of issues ­— fewer patients, lower reimbursements and lack of Medicaid expansion — is taking a toll.

Nationwide, Schmidt said, 50 small hospitals have closed. “Nearly one in six rural hospitals in Kansas have some of the same financial characteristics as those that have already closed and would be considered at-risk,” she said.

That means as many as 15 Kansas hospitals could be struggling to keep their doors open. “I don’t think everybody understands that the critical access hospital is absolutely central to the delivery of health care in all these communities we’re talking about,” said Kim Moore, president of the Hutchinson-based United Methodist Health Ministry Fund.

Maintaining access to health care in rural areas is one of the fund’s priorities. Moore said the hospitals are critical to rural health systems.

They’re the administrative base, usually, for the rural health clinic, the physician’s office,” Moore said. “They’re the base, in many cases, or certainly highly supportive of emergency services in the community. They are the reason that physicians can be recruited to those communities.”

Moore said small town residents realize how important their hospitals are. That’s why they’re often willing to pay higher taxes to support them. But as rural populations decline and tax bases shrink, that might not be enough to save all of the financially stressed hospitals across the state.

Moore and others say that rural hospitals are going to have to make fundamental changes in the way they do business — and collaborate more — to survive.

Bryan Thompson is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Docking Institute survey shows support among Kansas voters for LGBT rights

reformation project logoFHSU University Relations

A study completed recently for the Reformation Project by the Docking Institute of Public Affairs at Fort Hays State University regarding opinions on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues and opinions on same-sex marriage issues shows Kansas voters believe it is wrong to discriminate against gay and transgender people, but they also value religious faith and reject attempts by some to push their beliefs onto others.

In the conclusion to the report, Dr. Chapman Rackaway, a Docking Fellow and an FHSU professor of political science, found that Kansans are largely divided on support for gay marriage, civil unions or neither.

The poll found that Kansas voters are divided on same-sex marriage rights, with 49 percent in favor and 47 percent opposed. But a strong majority of Kansans support legal recognition for same-sex couples: 42 percent support full marriage; 31 percent support civil unions; and only 23 percent support no formal recognition.

When prefaced with the condition that churches would never be required to perform same-sex marriages, respondents’ support jumps to 60 percent.

“The data also show that Kansas voters reject discrimination against gay and transgender people,” Dr. Rackaway found. “Two-thirds of voters would support a law that protects gay and transgender people from discrimination in the workplace and strong majorities reject legislation that would allow discrimination by state workers and private businesses.”

Dr. Rackaway also found that “church attendance frequency and political partisanship were predictors of support or opposition to gay and transgender rights, as well as legislation to protect them. Except for full allowance of gay marriage, even the most frequent church attendants showed support for limited LGBT rights at least. Perhaps the most significant finding in the data is that the largest response group and the group most likely to form the hardest opposition to legal protections for LGBT rights, conservative Republicans, is widely split on a number of issues. Most conservative Republicans see discrimination as a problem, and nearly as many oppose allowing discrimination against gay and transgender people as support it.”

Some of the key findings from the survey:
· More than two-thirds (70 percent) of respondents favor a state law that would provide workplace protections for LGBT individuals.
· When given options to support full marriage rights for same-sex couples, civil unions or no legal recognition at all, most supported full marriage rights at 42 percent, with civil unions at 31 percent and no recognition at 23 percent.
· Same-sex marriage divided the respondents nearly evenly, with 49 percent in favor either strongly or somewhat and 47 percent opposed to same-sex marriage rights.
· When provided the qualifier that churches would never be required to perform same-sex marriages, support for allowing LGBT individuals to legally marry jumped to 60 percent.
· A majority of respondents (55 percent) opposed House Bill 2453 in 2014 that would have made LGBT discrimination legal for private business and government. Just over one-third (35 percent) supported the bill.
· More than three-quarters (77 percent) of respondents opposed a hypothetical bill that would allow government employees who object on religious grounds to deny services to gay couples. Just under one-sixth (14 percent) supported such a bill.
· Almost three-quarters (74 percent) would also oppose a bill that would allow businesses and government employees to refuse to recognize married gay couples and thus deny them family leave, medical information or pensions. Less than 20 percent supported such a bill.
· A majority (56 percent) opposed and just over a third (36 percent) supported a bill that would allow private businesses to refuse service to gay couples and other LGBT individuals if they believed doing so violated their religion.
· Exactly three-quarters believed that businesses should not be allowed to discriminate against LGBT or other persons regardless of race, religion or other criteria. Just over one-fifth (21 percent) supported allowing businesses to discriminate.
· Almost 70 percent of respondents would not support the re-election of their state legislator if he or she had voted for a bill that would have allowed the religious-based LGBT discrimination to take place, while 17 percent would be more likely to support re-election. However, the support was soft, as a majority of those supporting the re-election of said legislator indicated they would not actively campaign for their re-election (56 percent), while among those who would vote against said legislator, 56 percent said they would not actively campaign against their re-election.
· Most respondents (91 percent) believe that religious and cultural diversity are important elements that have flourished due to Constitutional protection.
· Almost three-quarters of respondents were equally divided in believing that discrimination against an LGBT individual is either a major or minor problem. In comparison, 24 percent of respondents said that LGBT discrimination was not much of a problem or none at all.
· Respondents were evenly divided among whom they trusted most for information on LGBT discrimination. Just under one-fifth look to friends and family (20 percent), while 15 percent said church leaders, and 11 percent said gay and lesbian couples themselves.
· Respondents who indicated a party identification were evenly divided by party and faction, with 28 percent self-identified as conservative Republicans, 20 percent moderate Republicans, 27 percent independent, and 22 percent Democrats. Overall, about half of these respondents indicated that they would vote against their party if another party better represented their views.
· Relationships between political partisanship and attitudes toward LGBT discrimination were more pronounced than relationships between church attendance and LGBT discrimination attitudes, suggesting that politics is a stronger driver of opinions than religious beliefs.
· Conservative Republicans were not only the largest group of respondents, they displayed a split that was not evident among any other ideological self-identification. Conservative Republicans are divided between support for and opposition to LGBT discrimination laws.

The Docking Institute conducted the survey for The Reformation Project, a Christian advocacy group for gay and transgender issues. The samples included Kansas landline telephone numbers and cell-phone numbers, so as to reach a representative sample of likely voters. The data were collected using a highly advanced computer-assisted telephone interviewing system and highly trained survey interviewers recruited mostly from the FHSU student population.

Data for the survey were collected this year from Jan. 21 to Feb. 5. The survey interviewed 700 respondents, which at the 95-percent confidence level, yields a margin of error for the full population of +/- 3.8 percent. As a result, it can be ascertained that the responses gathered from the sample population provide an extremely good indication of the opinions of all registered Kansas voters.

The complete survey report is available online at www.fhsu.edu/docking.

About The Reformation Project
The Reformation Project exists to train Christians to support and affirm lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. Through building a deep grassroots movement, The Reformation Project strives to create an environment in which Christian leaders will have the freedom to take the next steps toward affirming and including LGBT people in all aspects of church life.

Kansas AG seeks up to $450K to defend new anti-abortion law

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt is telling legislators that defending a new anti-abortion law in court could cost the state up to $450,000.

The new law takes effect in July and bans a procedure used in second trimester abortions that critics describe as dismembering a fetus. Kansas is the first state to enact such a ban.

Abortion providers have said they’re considering lawsuits. Anti-abortion leaders are confident the statute will withstand a challenge.

Schmidt told legislators last week that his office could need $50,000 by the end of June, between $100,000 and $200,000 for the fiscal year beginning July 1 and up to $200,000 for the following fiscal year.

Schmidt’s office already has paid outside attorneys $1.2 million to defend anti-abortion laws since 2011, without losing a case.

Kansas faces criticism for cost of sex offender program

NICHOLAS CLAYTON, Associated Press

LARNED, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is among a number of states facing scrutiny over its program that commits sex offenders to involuntary treatment, which critics claim indefinitely warehouses them due to public safety concerns.

Program supporters argue it is necessary to keep dangerous offenders off the street, but some lawmakers have expressed concern as its costs and population balloon. A state audit report is due out Tuesday, comparing Kansas’ programs to those in 19 other states and the District of Columbia.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback has recommended increasing its funding from $13.9 million in 2014 to $20.4 million by 2017 to accommodate its growing population.

The Department for Aging and Disability Services says the number of offenders confined under the program has grown to 258 since 1994 and only three have been released.

HHS grad earns place in Autism Speaks fellowship class

Unruh
Unruh

NEW YORK — The seventh annual class of Autism Speaks Weatherstone Predoctoral Fellows includes a Hays High School graduate. Selected from a highly competitive pool of applicants, the eight promising young investigators will pursue two-year autism research projects under the mentorship of the field’s leading scientists.

Kathryn Unruh of Vanderbilt University will investigate visual attention, nonsocial interests and motivations in toddlers affected by autism. Her goals include insights that can guide the creation of early intervention programs that improve social learning and development.

Unruh will work with developmental psychologist James Bodfish, whose research and practice focus on severe and treatment-resistant forms of autism.

She is a 2008 graduate of Hays High School.

Click HERE for more information from Autism Speaks.

MIAA softball tournament changes announced

MIAA Media Relations
Kansas City, Mo. —
It was announced today by the MIAA that the first and second round game times for the MIAA Softball Tournament will be changed.

The 6 p.m. game will now be played at 5 p.m. and the 8 p.m. game will now be scheduled for 7 p.m. Pre-game ceremonies will now take place at 4:30 p.m. including the announcement of the All-MIAA Softball first and second teams.

The rest of the tournament will continue as scheduled on May 1 from the Blue Valley Recreation Complex in Overland Park, Kan.

Kansas seat belt usage at all-time high

Col. Mark Bruce talks about the history of seat belts in Kansas during Monday's press conference
KHP Col. Mark Bruce talks about the history of seat belts in Kansas during Monday’s press conference

TOPEKA -The highest-ever percentage of buckled drivers and passengers in Kansas was recorded in 2014.
Kansas Transportation Secretary Mike King made the announcement of the increase in the observed seat belt rate today at an event at Kansas Highway Patrol Troop B headquarters in Topeka.

“Eighty-six percent of drivers and front seat passengers were buckled up. That’s a five percentage point increase from the previous year,” said Secretary King.
In 2003, a year after the observed seat belt rate was only 61 percent; Kansas implemented the safety campaign, “Click it. Or ticket.” which combines education and enforcement with the help of Kansas law enforcement agencies.
Speaking on behalf of Kansas law enforcement, Kansas Highway Patrol Colonel Mark Bruce said the future of safety is moving in the right direction.

“This tells us that we are doing something right,” Col. Bruce said. We are seeing progress in the form of more people taking the initiative to protect themselves and buckle up.”
Law enforcement works with the KDOT-sponsored program, the Kansas Traffic Safety Resource Office (KTSRO), and uses their high school based education program, Seat belts Are For Everyone, or SAFE, to get the message to new drivers.
The SAFE program began in six high schools in Crawford County. Today it is in 128 schools in 60 counties, and reaches more than 100,000 students, according to

KTSRO project director Norraine Wingfield. SAFE is a cooperative effort to highlight the importance of wearing seat belts and decrease risky driving behaviors of teens.
Wingfield said the observed teen rate for seat belt usage has been increasing at a greater rate than any other age group, and counties that have the SAFE program increased the seat belt rate for all ages.
“This shows that when drivers are buckled up, the occupants of the car are buckled up,” Wingfield said.
Secretary King pointed out that today’s announcement was worth celebrating but the national average for seat belt usage is 87%.
“We still have 14% of our state’s population going unbuckled,” Secretary King said. “That’s far too many. We will keep working to educate and enforce Kansas law.
“The message is simple. Seat belts save lives.”

Missing Kansas inmate captured

WINFIELD – The search for a missing Kansas inmate is over. The Cowley County Sheriff’s Department reported in a media release deputies received information from Kay County Oklahoma that John Douglas Wooten was in the Newkirk Oklahoma area.

He was arrested and is being held pending extradition to Kansas to face the original charges of theft, forgery, making false information and new charges of aggravated escape from custody.

Wooten was out on a court ordered furlough and did not return to the jail after his mental evaluation on April 20.

Pilot makes emergency landing in eastern Kansas field

News Century Airport Google map
News Century Airport Google map

GARDNER, Kan. (AP) — The pilot of a small home-built aircraft was walking around uninjured after making an emergency landing in an eastern Kansas field.

The Kansas City Star reports the pilot reported losing oil pressure before landing in a field five miles north of New Century Airport outside Gardner, where it had taken off minutes earlier on Monday morning.

The Long-EZ home-built plane landed about 9:50 a.m. The pilot was the only person aboard the small plane.

Kansas governor to re-enact signing of anti-abortion measure

Original signing of the legislation
Original signing of the legislation

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback plans to have four ceremonies across Kansas to re-enact his signing of the nation’s first ban on a procedure that critics describe as dismembering a fetus.

The Republican governor’s events Tuesday are at a Catholic church education building in Lenexa and Catholic high schools in Pittsburg, Wichita and Hays.

Brownback signed the measure April 7, and it takes effect in July. Oklahoma enacted such a law days later.

Both states’ laws ban doctors from using forceps, clamps, scissors or similar instruments on a live fetus to remove it from the womb in pieces.

Such instruments are used in dilation and evacuation procedures performed during the second trimester.

Abortion rights supporters say such procedures are often the safest for women seeking to terminate pregnancies during the second trimester.

2 hospitalized after car, semi collision

HOLTON- One person was injured in an accident just before 8 a.m. on Monday in Jackson County

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a Ford Escort driven by Daryl E. Merryfield, 57, Topeka, was southbound on U.S. 75 one mile north of Holton.

The vehicle crossed the centerline and hit a northbound semi.

Emergency Medical crews transported passengers in the Escort Ronnie L. Marn, 60, Topeka, and Tyrone Mitchell, 39, Omaha, NE., to Stormont Vail.

Merryfield and the semi driver Michael J. Polzkill, 59, Wellsville, were not injured.

All were properly restrained at the time of the accident according to the KHP.

Kansas ‘Flex service’ buses to operate like taxis

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Riding some Topeka buses will soon be more like taking a taxi ride.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the city’s mass transit provider, Topeka Metro, plans to offer a “flex service” beginning Aug. 3. Initially, the service will be offered in east and southeast Topeka.

People in the zone can arrange for a small bus to come pick them up at the curb if they call at least three hours in advance.

For $2, those passengers then will be able to ride anywhere else in the flex zone. Or they could take the bus to a Walmart Supercenter, a Topeka Metro anchor location, where they will be able to board a fixed-route bus at no extra cost.

Topeka Metro spokesman Ronnie Murphy says the goal is to boast ridership.

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