Large swaths of rural America are health care deserts with too few primary care doctors, pediatricians, and OB-GYNs to care for residents
In one small Missouri town, a pediatrician decided to stay even as the hospital closed and colleagues left for big cities
Bridging the Great Health Divide: Provider shortages around the nation By Jill Riepenhoff, Daniela Molina, Jamie Grey, and Lee Zurik | April 5, 2021 at 11:46 AM EDT - Updated April 5 at 11:46 AM
KENNETT, Mo. (InvestigateTV) â Itâs never easy raising a medically fragile child. But for some parents in this rural Midwestern town, it used to be a lot easier.
you work at ge? yeah, i do. you guys are working on some pretty big stuff over there, right? like aew language for crazy-g, world-changing machines. like aew language ll, not me specifically. i work on the industrial side. so i build the rld-changing machines. i get it. you n t talk cae it s super high-level. noi acally do build the chines. blink if what you re doing involves encpted noi acally do builddata transfer. wait, what? wowwww. whatow?theris no wow. wow? trusmber o doctor recommended dulcolax constipated? use dulcolax tablets for gentle ernight reli suppitories for relief in mes and ool sos r comfortae relief of harstoo and dulcax, deed for r codeab reliefief