When Missouri’s Twin Rivers medical center closed, executives claimed it was a ‘consolidation’ with a new facility – but residents say it points to a healthcare crisis
One hospital worker after another echoed Cindy Anderson’s warning.
“Heart attack patients are not going to make it,” said Tonia Swink, a nurse at the hospital who worked in healthcare for 38 years.
Dr Dave Jain, who worked for 29 years as an internist at Twin Rivers and now runs his own clinic in Kennett, is asking the same question.
“People have died as a result.”
Kennett is not alone in losing its medical care. More than 160 rural hospitals and clinics have closed across the US since 2005 mostly under financial pressure.
As private business faded, so the number of specialists employed at the hospital dropped. Even then, it remained profitable.
“This hospital was closed mostly by the greed of the corporation,” said Dr Jain.
Anderson said others are boycotting CHS.
“What they didn’t bargain for was that people were going to be so mad at them that they wouldn’t go to Poplar Bluff,”