By Jim Spencer
SpencerSpeaks.com
Kent Vance has thick hands that bear the calluses and scars of installing heating and air conditioning systems and tending his family’s century-old farm.
On this day, however, his right hand is thicker than usual. It is swollen.
It has been days since Vance cut his hand on some sheet metal. But like so many rural residents of
Actually, Vance can’t even go to a doctor for an emergency. Not unless he wants to drive 35 miles or more. The Colorado Health Institute reports that only one doctor lives in

So Vance sits on an examination table in the Washington County Clinic in the county seat of
After discussing Vance’s father’s near-fatal allergy to penicillin, Hutcheson settles on Keflex.
“If your hand gets more red or if you get red streaks up your arm or if it becomes more swollen and you get pus, come back and let me know,†Hutcheson tells Vance. “If you develop a rash, take Benadryl with the antibiotic and eat before you take it.â€
But, the nurse practitioner stresses, take the medicine.
“Don’t skip any doses and don’t save any pills,†she says.
Hording medicine is not just a problem in rural
“I wait as long as I can, and when I can’t wait any longer, I come in,†Vance says of his approach to doctor visits.
The idea that this could lead to needless pain, more expensive treatment and, in the worst case, life-threatening complications doesn’t seem to compute.
Statistics show at least four
In August, Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter issued an executive order establishing the Colorado Rural Health Care Grants Council. The council will spend the next six years doling out a $7.5 million charitable gift from the private medical provider UnitedHealth Group.
Everyone hopes the charity turns out to be more than a band aid on a severed limb.
It isn’t just a lack of physicians that affects rural health care in

She’s even made house calls. She gets buzzed on her personal cell phone on weekends because that’s what’s on the answering machine at the clinic. This summer she drove 30 miles from her home in Brush to celebrate an
The wall of Hutcheson’s office includes pictures of famous nurses Clara Barton and Florence Nightingale. A small framed poster includes a quote from Mother Teresa. The quote says God won’t give you anything you can’t handle.
In three years practicing in this rural clinic, patients have presented Hutcheson with infections, respiratory distress, pneumonia, clogged arteries, appendicitis, ulcers, broken bones, skin lesions, frost bite, burns, lacerations, menopause, erectile dysfunction and a host of other maladies.
She treats roughly nine in ten folks and refers the rest to doctors and hospitals long drives away.
Yet even with an Internet full of clinical support, Hutcheson and the physician who drives in from out of town once a week to hold office hours in the Washington County Clinic face challenges they would not face in

They have no lab facilities. So it takes 24 to 48 hours to get routine test results. It takes two or three days to get an x-ray read.
And then there is the working poverty of too many of their patients. Hutcheson says a lot of the people she treats are just “working to put food on the table. They’re not stupid. They work hard.â€
Still, many of them live one medical crisis from financial disaster.
“I have people come in, and I say, ‘I really need a CAT scan of your abdomen.’ And they say, ‘I can’t pay for that,’†Hutcheson recounts. “There are times when I just have to trust my gut.â€
She has seen tears well up in patients’ eyes because there is no way they can afford the medicine and lab work they need.
“One day I wrote a prescription for a patient,†Hutcheson says. “I found it later wadded up in the gutter outside the clinic. I think our health care system is very broken. Access to health care shouldn’t depend on how much money you have.â€
Unfortunately, Hutcheson knows that it does, especially in rural areas.
“I know a person with colon cancer,†she says. “I know the family doesn’t have health insurance. I expect they’re going to lose their ranch.â€
A while back, doctors told Kent Vance he needed to have his gall bladder removed. He didn’t have $14,000 to pay for it and didn’t want to tap his retirement savings account for the money.
So he changed his diet and lifestyle. After a couple of months the symptoms disappeared.
Vance’s wife, Cindy, wasn’t so lucky. She had bone rubbing on bone in her back. She had to have surgery, and the couple had to pay for it.
Meanwhile, the Vances have priced private health insurance. For regular coverage with co-pays, they would pay $870 per month, or $10,440 per year. They can knock the premiums down to $260 a month with a $5,000 deductible. That means, essentially, that the couple would still have to pay $8,120 a year out-of-pocket before they could get any help.
“Medical insurance is so expensive people can’t afford it,†says Cindy Vance. “You have to go without.â€
For this devoutly religious and all-too-typical rural
“If we have a major problem,†Cindy Vance explains, “we’re going to be hurting.â€
Copyright 2007 by Jim Spencer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.




11 users commented in " Painful Choices: Rural Nurse Practitioner Battles Broken Health System "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a Trackback[…] Staff had some great ideas on this topic.You can read a snippet of the post here.Yet out in the country, where a lack of health insurance combines with a tough-it-out farmer/rancher mentality, the country’s broken health care system seems to be shattered into a few more pieces. […]
[…] Here’s another interesting post I read today by Jim Spencer […]
We spend billions in Iraq but don’t care about our own who don’t thave the resources.
It is so wonderful that these rural people have Ms. Hutcheson.She is truly a saint.I am very aware of how hard she works. In the rural community I grew up in, we rarely had access to a doctor, they could not be retained for long. It was just too much for one dr. to be on call all the time. I don’t think there was such a profession as Nurse Practitioner in those days.
I remember many times a townsperson or marshall would ring our doorbell in the middle of the night for a medical emergency or accident out on the highway. My dad was a pharmacist, the nearest thing to an EMT I guess, there were no ambulances so he was sought out (volunteer of course). I remember him sometimes riding with them to the hospital (a choice of 3 hospitals in 3 states, each an hour drive away.)
Now to the insurance. It is outrageous that anyone should be in the position that it’s the family farm or medical care.These farms are dear to the hearts of generations of people. I cried like a baby a few years ago,when the farm that my grandparents homesteaded in 1908 was sold.
Farmers/ranchers have a very hard life, hail, drought, wind, blizzards it’s almost impossible to make a living. That’s why some have outside employment, they are keeping the farm out of love.
Gov’t. employees have insurance(I’m sure that’s why it’s not a high priority in D.C.). Healthy people who have chosen not to work and unwed mothers have insurance. For pete’s sake, why can’t we help hard-working people and people who have lost their jobs through no fault of their own and people who have many medical needs? Why do they have to lose everything they own to have medical care?
All the politicians do is talk,talk, talk.
Life is hard. If a person chooses to live in a very remote place, choices will be less for all services. Whether it be for liquor stores or X-rays. Also, Wildflower keeps referring to government employees having “subsidized” insurance. She fails to notice the main aspect of their insurance, that they are employees and it is part of their benefits. I want health insurance to be affordable to every one. I wish that people didn’t have to make choices between bread on the table and insurance. Something needs to be done here, short of full socialization of medical services in our country.
That being said, a person that chooses to live a subsistence type of lifestyle in a rural setting may not get the type of “right now” service that they may desire. I grew up in Alaska and the lifestyle that many of these people choose is their own. I admire their lifestyle and would give anything to make it my own, but I am aware of the give and take of the choice where they want to live.
It is sad that your family lost their homestead that was owned since 1908, but I see no reason why the rest of society should worry that they weren’t subsidized to be able to carry on with that lifestyle. Why was this mentioned here?
If I owned a sandwich shop that could not earn a profit to sustain it’s existence, would society care? Harsh, I know, but it is a reality
The care providers in these areas are “saints” and we as a civilized society need to make sure that health care is as accessible as possible. It does need to be subsidized. My Mom nursed the Native population in the Hudson Bay area of Canada in the early 1960’s. It is a real commitment and fulfilling in ways that you and I cannot understand. But to think that medical care will be as readily available as Denver is not a reality.
We heard all kinds of stories during health care hearings we sponsored last year. Even one West Slope couple who had UnitedHealth Insurance experienced consistent delays and denial of claims - the insurance middlemen in Denial Managment game the system by searching claims for reasons to deny and renig on reimbursements. Health insurance companies choose us - we don’t choose them.
Read more about the Colorado Health Services Single Payer Proposal — the only Colorado proposal evaluated by the Lewin Group this year that would save money and provide comprehensive health care for all in the state: www.healthcareforallcolorado.org.
Noidea I am not suggesting anything but that PEOPLE SHOULD BE ABLR TO GET HEALTH INSURANCE AT A REASONABLE PRICE.A $5,000 deductible means no routine medical care at all. And a major illness should not bankrupt you so you lose your farm, your way of life.
We’re talking citizens of the U.S. here, not people who are not citizens who can walk into Denver General and get free care and not have to worry about paying the bill. The system should not be such that you lose everything you have in a major illness.
I mentioned farm because if you read the article, a person had cancer and would probably lose their ranch to pay the medical costs.
I can relate to that since we had to sell our granparents’ farm under the dictates of the estate after my parents died.It’s a sad and nostalgic occasion, when you think of beloved Grandparents, Christmases, times spent on the farm with them in the summer, their wonderful work ethic, a farm is a whole way of life.One should not have to give that up for medical care.
noidea, sometime this year I saw a story on t.v. abt. a woman who had come to the U.S. illegally from Mexico because she had cancer. She was receiving very good treatment for her cancer in an Atlanta hospital, free. Why is it that an American citizen can’t get cancer treatment without losing their home????
The system IS broken.
Quite simply: If a United States citizen has no health insurance, or inadequate health insurance,and is not eligible for Medicare and Medicaid, and you’re not extremely wealthy……if you get a catastrophic injury or illness, you’re going to go bankrupt or die.
I agree with you Wildflower, believe it or not.
Thanks noidea, it is indeed a Christmas miracle! You have reasonable and valid opinions.I hope you and your family have a great holiday season! Your county is certainly the right color!
And Lhkman, Happy Holidays to you. Noone can make a better point than you and do so with such reason that one knows you must be right.
I’m sorry for my “pomposity” and now I am becoming quite discontent everytime we get out the snowblower, thinking I would much rather pay an HMO a few hundred a month for this service as well as housepainting and all the other home maintenance we are slaves to, including the high carbonprint lawnmowing.
And to think of someone plowing the streets before it is a foot deep would be pure joy.
This may be the “Winter of Discontent” for me!
And Merry Christmas to you Dennis, the first two Christmases after I lost my mother were sad, I’d be shopping and see something I’d like to buy for her, and then realize that I don’t have a mother anymore. I got through it by remembering how she suffered just to breathe and I was grateful she didn’t have to suffer anymore. Take care.
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