June 13, 2019

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New poll shows rural health may be powerful issue in 2020 election

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A vast majority of Americans, both Democrats and Republicans, consider access to health care in rural communities an important issue. Additionally, three in five voters think it is so important, they would vote for a candidate in the 2020 election who prioritized rural health in the campaign. These are encouraging findings from a new poll released by the Bipartisan Policy Center and the American Heart Association.

Survey results will be discussed during an event today to launch BPC's new Rural Health Task Force, co-chaired by former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle and former Sen. Olympia Snowe. The task force will produce policy recommendations to help improve the and of the 60 million Americans living in .

Statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show those living in rural areas are at a greater risk of dying from heart disease, cancer, stroke, and chronic lower respiratory disease. These communities also face alarming rates of hospital closures, health care worker shortages, and geographic challenges to getting timely care compared to those living in urban areas.

"We are pleased to see that our poll shows rural health is an issue of concern for rural, urban, and suburban Americans, and transcends political parties," said Daschle. "Rural health has never been a top tier issue on the campaign trail. However, these findings show that it could be a powerful topic in the 2020 election. It should prompt every candidate and policymaker to address the challenges of rural health and take action."

"Geography should never be an impediment to quality health care," said Snowe. "We need to provide rural communities with the innovation and technology necessary to create a health care system that better serves all rural Americans."

The survey, conducted by Morning Consult, polled nearly 2,000 registered voters online, including an additional 200 interviews with rural adults in each of the following states that will play an important role in the 2020 election: Iowa, North Carolina, and Texas.

Among the findings:

"Timely access to quality care can mean the difference between life and death for someone suffering from a major cardiac event or stroke," said Eduardo Sanchez, chief medical officer for prevention at the American Heart Association. "Together with BPC, the American Heart Association is working to bring attention to the critical need to overcome obstacles to care faced by rural communities nationwide."

"Addressing the barriers to delivering high-quality health care to rural communities is long overdue," said Walter Panzirer, a trustee of the Helmsley Charitable Trust. "It's time to give rural health care the national attention it deserves."

Over the next year, BPC's rural health will build on BPC's 2018 report, "Reinventing Rural Health Care: A Case Study of Seven Upper Midwest States." The report identified key areas for reform that could apply nationally to all rural communities: 1) allow rural communities to adjust their own health care services to better fit the community's needs, 2) create appropriate payment models and value-based care programs that account for low patient volumes, and a reliance on Medicare and Medicaid, 3) build and retain the rural workforce, and 4) expand telemedicine services.

More information: Reinventing Rural Health Care: A Case Study of Seven Upper Midwest States: bipartisanpolicy.org/library/r … g-rural-health-care/

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