Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Coronavirus in rural America (Part CXII): Health care workers getting out of the field in rural Kansas

Frank Morris reported for National Public Radio reported yesterday under the headline, "'Toxic Individualism': Pandemic Politics Driving Health Care Workers From Small Towns."  The gist is that public health and other health care workers in rural Kansas are being harassed into resignation, into leaving their posts.  Here's an excerpt:

The virus infecting thousands of Americans a day is also attacking the country's social fabric. The coronavirus has exposed a weakness in many rural communities, where divisive pandemic politics are alienating some of their most critical residents — health care workers.

A wave of departing medical professionals would leave gaping holes in the rural health care system, and small-town economies, triggering a death spiral in some of these areas that may be hard to stop.

Ten years ago, Dr. Kristina Darnauer and her husband, Jeff, moved to tiny Sterling, Kan., to raise their kids steeped in small-town values.

"The values of hard work, the value of community, taking care of your neighbor, that's what small towns shout from the rooftops, this is what we're good at. We are salt of the earth people who care about each other," Darnauer says. "And here I am saying, then wear a mask because that protects your precious neighbor."

But Darnauer's medical advice and moral admonition were met with contempt from some of her friends, neighbors and patients. People who had routinely buttonholed her for quick medical advice at church and kids' ballgames were suddenly treating her as the enemy and regarding her professional opinion as suspect and offensive.

Don't miss this entire story for a sense of how the culture wars have infiltrated the public health sphere in the age of Trump and coronavirus.  

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