I’m so excited to be starting this new role. I’ve been a journalist since I was 16 years old, chasing a local TV news crew down the street to ask for help getting an internship. My career has taken me all over the country, and even a few years reporting in Egypt. But I’ve been at Marketplace longer than any other newsroom, 11 years next month, and have learned so much in that time about the way our economy works, and who it does and doesn’t work for. I can’t wait to keep up the amazing work the “Morning Report” team has done over the years with David Brancaccio, and I’m looking forward to adding my own flair to the mix. —
Kimberly Adams | |
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Thomasville Mayor Sheldon Day, right, is hopeful that they will find a buyer to reopen the hospital, which has been closed for nearly two years now. (Alex Schroeder/Marketplace) | |
Why this rural Alabama hospital is struggling to reopen |
The Thomasville Regional Medical Center opened in 2020, with state-of-the-art facilities. The only hospital in town, it closed less than five years later. What happened? |
Inside the Thomasville Regional Medical Center, it’s almost as if you’re just walking through on an early morning before it’s about to open. There’s still paper on all the exam chairs, ready for a check-up or doctor’s visit.
In reality, the hospital is frozen in time, and it’s been closed for almost two years. The bright reception areas, brand new surgery facilities, and the only in-house MRI machine for dozens of miles are all empty.
Sheldon Day, the mayor of Thomasville, was our tour guide when we visited the town about an hour and a half north of Mobile. It’s situated in Alabama’s 7th Congressional district, an area with some of the lowest life expectancies in the entire country.
That’s why Day told us Thomasville needs its hospital.
“We have a primary care clinic here with all the bells and whistles. We were the only hospital in the region that did 3D digital mammograms. The only thing you're missing is patients,” he said.
The medical center closed in 2024, less than five years after it opened. The COVID-19 pandemic was a major factor. Like so many hospitals around the country, Thomasville Regional shut down elective and nonessential care, which the mayor said made up something like 75% of the patient volume here.
But when the hospital was open, there were also patients like this one.
“We had a young lady who had a heart condition,” Day said. “Basically, one of her aorta tore, and they brought her here. Any other hospital would not have been able to see what we saw, but because of our advanced diagnostics, they had a surgery team waiting on her as soon as she got to a facility in Mobile, and her life was saved. Today, she’s got two children, active family here in our community, business owners in our community. And that’s just one example. If she had had that last month, while this hospital was closed, she would’ve died.”
Mayor Day has given dozens of tours to prospective buyers and media over the last couple of years, trying to get the hospital reopened.
In Alabama, the state hospital association says more than 80% of rural hospitals are operating at a loss.
“Many of the buyers that looked at the facility, they absolutely were foaming at the mouth to buy it,” Day said. “And then they go work the numbers, and they go, ‘Ah, don't think we're going to do it.’“ | |
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| What Kimberly’s reading about this week The World Cup | |
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Many Thomasville, Alabama, residents have to travel nearly two hours to Mobile for certain healthcare needs. (Alex Schroeder/Marketplace) | What a local economy loses when its hospital closes |
Hospitals are both healthcare centers and economic hubs for rural communities. | |
On the main street of downtown Thomasville, there’s a bakery, a movie theater under renovation, and the Thomasville Sports Hall of Fame. It was there we met Jimmy Duncan.
“They put me in the hall of fame about six, eight months ago,” Duncan said. He was a college football national champion in 1971.
But after his playing days, Duncan worked at the nearby paper mill his dad helped open.
“You see these knees right here?” Duncan asked. “That wasn't from playing football. That was from running up and down that floor, on that cement floor. But the paper mill is pretty tough work, but it was the highest-paying job in the area.”
We also met Charlie Anderson, who’s Thomasville-born and -raised. He brought this hall of fame to life a dozen years ago. But we weren’t just visiting to relive the glory days; we also wanted to talk about healthcare, and the lack thereof in this area.
“Thirty minutes in any direction you want to go, there are paper mill or wood products industries,” Anderson said. “Jimmy can tell you, accidents that happened at mills, you haven’t got two hours sometimes to drive somebody.”
So when the hospital shuts down, as it did here in Thomasville, there’s a hit to community health and to financial health. Alabama hospitals generate about $30 billion a year in economic activity, according to the state’s hospital association.
“I would think it probably also affects new people looking at locating in a place like Thomasville, to think about, ‘If I don't have good healthcare, I might not want to go there,’ “ Anderson said.
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Dr. Marsha Raulerson (right) has been practicing medicine in Brewton, Alabama, for 40 years. She has seen what lack of health care access means for a community. (Alex Schroeder/Marketplace) | |
When policy impedes healthcare, what are the solutions? |
Yes, there’s money on the way from the federal government. But communities and healthcare systems are also taking things into their own hands. | |
One of the reasons we traveled to Alabama was because it’s been almost a year since President Trump signed his big tax and spending law, which many experts predicted would put additional strain on an already thinly-stretched rural healthcare infrastructure. Over the decades, Dr. Marsha Raulerson, a pediatrician in Brewton, Alabama, has seen firsthand how rising costs and changing policy shape individual health care choices.
We met her on her lunch break one Wednesday afternoon at David’s Catfish House. She’s a pediatrician who’s been working in the area, about an hour and a half northeast of Mobile, since 1980.
And she keeps a list of cases where she says patients’ lack of access to — or ability to afford — healthcare cut their lives short.
“Forty-seven-year-old, died with congestive heart failure related to chronic kidney disease and type 2 diabetes. He was 47,” Raulerson recounted. “He's part of our workforce, right? He's 47. He's part of our future. He’s a father, maybe even a grandfather. And now he's 47 and he's not with us anymore. And it's a loss not only to his family, his children, but to the community.”
Raulerson said the private market won’t be much of a safety net for the people in her community.
“If you get insurance from your company you work for, you may have a $1,000 deductible for each family member, so people just don't get care,” she explained. | |
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SONG OF THE WEEK |
“I'm An Albatraoz” by AronChupa and Little Sis Nora |
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Kimberly Adams, circa 2015 | |
When I was originally applying for my reporter job at Marketplace back in 2015, I submitted part of my application as an audio essay, and used this song to start. I used it as my "pump up" music for years as a way to boost my energy before recording something under a blanket in my apartment in Egypt. Have a great weekend! | |
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