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Why a Georgia hospital closes – and a red state rethinks Medicaid

When the Jenkins County Medical Center announced its closing in 2017, residents and political leaders in Millen, Georgia, didn’t bow to circumstance. People and jobs were disappearing, leaving many poor and uninsured people in another struggling Southern town. But Millen’s leaders did not give up.

“We had no choice but to crawl our way out of it,” says King Rocker, the town’s Republican mayor, who knew the value of having affordable, local health care.

Why We Wrote This

Rising costs and faltering hospitals are causing many Southern conservatives to reconsider the government’s role in health care – and how affordable access bolsters community well-being.

Millen’s community hospital was saved, in part, by being taken out of private hands and put in those of the county hospital authority. Jobs trickled back.

And in the region, the issue of publicly funded health care, once dubbed “Obamacare,” made its way back into conversations.

Polling in Georgia and Mississippi underscores public support for Medicaid expansion. More than half of Mississippi’s GOP primary voters said they would support closing coverage gaps. And in Georgia, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp has signed a bill to cut regulations on local hospitals to staunch the closings – 14 in just over a decade – and study ways to support care for uninsured Georgians. Other Southern states are considering expanding publicly funded health care options as well. 

Not long ago, news that Jenkins County Medical Center would close in this former cotton crossroads suggested a tough truth: that people and jobs were disappearing, leaving many poor and uninsured people in another struggling Southern town. 

The Great Recession of 2007-2009 had already eliminated all 1,700 manufacturing jobs in this Georgia county of just 8,000 people. In the years since that recession, nearly 150 hospitals have closed in rural towns across the United States, most in the South.

But when this medical center’s closing was announced in 2017, Millen’s residents and political leaders didn’t bow to circumstance.

Why We Wrote This

Rising costs and faltering hospitals are causing many Southern conservatives to reconsider the government’s role in health care – and how affordable access bolsters community well-being.

“We had no choice but to crawl our way out of it,” says King Rocker, the town’s Republican mayor. 

Economic troubles have impelled many Southern conservatives, like Mayor Rocker, to consider fresh approaches to the role that government plays in health care. Many of them, ever so slowly, have begun opening toward the idea that providing publicly funded basic health care may be vital to the overall well-being of a community.

Or as Republican pollster Brent Buchanan puts it, they see an emerging benefit from “investing in the infrastructure of people,” at a time when many conservative voters are pressed by health insurance costs.

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