In the Mississippi Delta—the poorest region in the poorest state—the doctors, nurses, and administrators have sacrificed and improvised, month after month.
When the delta variant emerged in mid-2021, it zeroed in on the poorest pockets of the rural South. By late summer, the Covid death rate in Mississippi was higher than anywhere else https://t.co/YjypOfzdAjpic.twitter.com/4T9rfirrRe
When neurosurgeon Craig Clark’s contract wasn’t renewed, he wondered about his patients.
Most would have to travel 1-2 hours longer. That extra distance, he believed, might be the difference between a full recovery and a permanent disability, or worse https://t.co/YjypOfzdAjpic.twitter.com/MsHUvFlLvC
Working in the Delta pushed nurse Cassie Oglesby to her limit. She’s now in Phoenix.
“We saw it coming,” Oglesby said of the weeks before things got really bad. “And every nurse and every doctor in the ICU said, ‘No—I can’t do this. I just can’t’ ” https://t.co/YjypOfzdAjpic.twitter.com/sMkHSppvXZ
We need more doctors and nurses. We need their educations subsidized or outright paid for in exchange for public service for a few years in underserved communities.
When medical education becomes more accsoble and less $$$ for students then this could be addressed. Look at UK system, in order to fight shortage they are implementing physician apprenticeship. But again US model is very money hungry when it comes to healthcare unfortunately
Better hurry up with the development and approval of at-home pharmaceutical treatments or the whole country's health care system could end up a lot more like the one in the Delta
Comments
by artappraiser on Sat, 01/29/2022 - 9:06pm
Better hurry up with the development and approval of at-home pharmaceutical treatments or the whole country's health care system could end up a lot more like the one in the Delta
by artappraiser on Mon, 01/31/2022 - 7:15pm
More are going to crack:
by artappraiser on Wed, 02/02/2022 - 7:29pm