Return To Full Article
You can republish this story for free. Click the "Copy HTML" button below. Questions? Get more details.

Across the South, Rural Health Care Has Become 鈥楾rendy.鈥 Medicaid Expansion Has Not.

WALHALLA, S.C. 鈥 Nestled in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, a small primary care clinic run by Clemson University draws patients from across the region. Many are Hispanic and uninsured, and some are willing to travel from other counties, bypassing closer health care providers, just to be seen by Michelle Deem, the clinic鈥檚 bilingual nurse practitioner.

鈥淧atients who speak Spanish really prefer a Spanish-speaking provider,鈥 Deem said. 鈥淚鈥檝e gotten to know this community pretty well.鈥

Clemson doesn't operate an academic medical center, nor does it run a medical school. Arguably, the public university is best known for its football program. Yet, with millions of dollars earmarked from the state legislature, it has expanded into delivering health care, with clinics in Walhalla and beyond. School leaders are attempting to address gaps in rural and underserved parts of a state where health outcomes routinely rank among the worst in the country.

鈥淪ome of these communities have such high need,鈥 said , director of Clemson Rural Health, which operates four clinics and a fleet of mobile health units as part of the university鈥檚 College of Behavioral, Social and Health Sciences. 鈥淭hey have so many barriers that impact their ability to be healthy.鈥

Clemson Rural Health is one of several programs attempting to meet this need in the state.

鈥淩ural health is trendy,鈥 said Graham Adams, CEO of the .

A woman is shown disinfecting a countertop in a doctor's office.
Kensley Atkins, a recent graduate of Clemson University, disinfects a countertop in September in one of the university鈥檚 mobile health units. Atkins completed an internship with Clemson鈥檚 rural health program during the fall semester and hopes to attend graduate school to become a physician assistant. (Lauren Sausser/麻豆女优 Health News)

State lawmakers nationwide are spending millions of dollars to address a rural health care crisis long in the making. For more than a decade, though, Republican-controlled legislatures in most have refused billions in federal funds that would provide public health insurance coverage to more low-income adults. These are the same states where racial health disparities and health outcomes are often worse than in other regions.

Nearly every state has extended Medicaid coverage for women in the months after they give birth. But haven鈥檛 fully expanded Medicaid coverage with federal money made available under the 2010 Affordable Care Act. Seven of these states 鈥 Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas 鈥 are in the South. With few exceptions, adults without children in these states don鈥檛 qualify for Medicaid coverage, regardless of their income level.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, both Republicans, recently announced plans to expand Medicaid in limited ways to include some parents. The South Carolina plan would impose work requirements on some of these newly eligible Medicaid beneficiaries, while the Georgia plan would allow some parents of young children to skirt the state鈥檚 existing Medicaid work rules. Both plans require federal approval.

, a professor and health policy scholar at the University of North Carolina, said he doesn鈥檛 expect to see any of the remaining states rushing to fully expand Medicaid. Before Donald Trump took office on Jan. 20, Republicans in Washington had already expressed their intention to dramatically cut spending for Medicaid, which covers 72 million people at a cost of nearly $900 billion.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a large gray cloud hanging over Medicaid expansion right now, and that鈥檚 because there鈥檚 so much uncertainty about what the Trump administration and congressional Republicans are going to do,鈥 Oberlander said.

Even so, in South Carolina this year the plans to lobby the General Assembly to pass a bill to adopt Medicaid expansion, said Beth Johnson, regional government relations director for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network and a CoverSC board member. The state鈥檚 legislative session began Jan. 14.

If such a measure were approved, the federal government would cover 90% of the state鈥檚 Medicaid expansion costs and South Carolina would be expected to pay 10%, or an estimated $270 million during the first year, according to by the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University.

Across all 10 non-expansion states 鈥 which, outside the South, also include Kansas, Wisconsin, and Wyoming 鈥 about 1.5 million people fall into a coverage gap, according to , the health information nonprofit that includes 麻豆女优 Health News. That means they do not qualify for Medicaid coverage or financial assistance to buy insurance through the federal marketplace.

Many of the people who would qualify for Medicaid if these states were to expand eligibility are gig workers, Johnson said. They play music, drive for Uber, or deliver pizza, and they typically don鈥檛 qualify for health insurance through their jobs.

鈥淭hey are providing services that we all appreciate,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd they simply can鈥檛 afford health insurance.鈥

A mobile health care vehicle. It has a tiger painted on the side and says, "rural health."
A mobile health care unit operated by Clemson University鈥檚 rural health program offers mammograms and other preventive services to patients in rural and underserved parts of South Carolina. (Lauren Sausser/麻豆女优 Health News)

In some South Carolina communities, Clemson Rural Health attempts to fill this gap by providing primary care, cancer screenings, nutrition education, and diabetes management for uninsured patients free of charge or at reduced rates. Only about half of the patients seen by Clemson Rural Health have health insurance, Gimbel said, compared with 92% of the U.S. population.

During the current state fiscal year, Clemson Rural Health has been underwritten by a $2.5 million contract, its largest source of funding, from the state Department of Health and Human Services, which administers Medicaid in South Carolina and operates with a budget approved by state lawmakers.

That鈥檚 a relatively small amount of money compared with the $47.5 million the state legislature has given to the Medical University of South Carolina in recent years to move into rural communities. MUSC has served Charleston for most of its 200-year history, but since 2019 it has expanded across the state by purchasing, building, or partnering with seven rural hospitals 鈥 some on the brink of closure 鈥 and one freestanding emergency department. MUSC is set to open an additional rural hospital this year.

Other states have made similar investments. The University of Georgia, for example, has established a new medical school, partly to send more physicians into underserved and rural areas. The Georgia General Assembly kicked in half the cost of a new $100 million building for medical education and research in Athens.

Meanwhile, the Tennessee General Assembly passed a budget last year that included $81 million for a variety of rural health initiatives.

Outside the South, state legislatures in Colorado, Nevada, West Virginia, and elsewhere have made recent investments in rural health, in addition to expanding Medicaid eligibility.

Some of this spending has been prompted by a wave of rural hospital closures 鈥 since 2010, according to the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina.

It鈥檚 not yet clear what long-term impact some of these initiatives will have 鈥 for instance, whether the Clemson program will 鈥渞educe premature mortality, decrease preventable hospitalizations, and improve overall quality of life,鈥 as it aims to do, according to . Some public health experts point out that bolstering the number of rural clinics, hospitals, and doctors in the South won鈥檛 matter much if patients can鈥檛 afford to make an appointment.

鈥淟ack of ability to pay is one of the greatest barriers,鈥 said Adams, the Office of Rural Health chief.

Oberlander said conservative lawmakers often consider projects such as building new rural clinics more politically palatable than expanding Medicaid coverage.

鈥淭he further away you get from the ACA, the less polarized the politics of health care,鈥 he said.

South Carolina Senate President , a Republican who lives in Walhalla, said the General Assembly is willing to invest in some rural health initiatives to improve health care access.

鈥淛ust because you expand Medicaid doesn鈥檛 mean you鈥檝e expanded access to the services,鈥 Alexander said. 鈥淚 want to focus on expanding access to the services.鈥

Gimbel would not comment on Medicaid expansion in South Carolina, and he said it鈥檚 too soon to know how federal Medicaid changes under the Trump administration might affect funding for Clemson Rural Health, which currently receives money from the state鈥檚 Medicaid agency. But making the Clemson program financially solvent might take several more years, he said.

鈥淚f rural health was profitable,鈥 he said, 鈥渨e wouldn鈥檛 have a rural health problem.鈥

麻豆女优 Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at 麻豆女优鈥攁n independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .

Help 麻豆女优 Health News track this article

By including these elements when you republish, you help us:
  • Understand which communities and people we鈥檙e reaching.
  • Measure the impact of our health journalism.
  • Continue providing free, high-quality health news to the public.
Canonical Tag

Include this in your page's <head> section to properly attribute this content.

Tracking Snippet

Add this snippet at the end of your republished article to help us track its reach.