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Rural hospitals are threatened
with closure due to pressure from many sources.
Government regulations limit funding and lack of community support
reduces patient volume. Extended
hours and isolated working conditions cause high turnover in personnel. Some government programs have been enacted to reduce
closures, but information on these programs may be difficult to locate.
Administrators need a mechanism to share information on methods
used and the results of these efforts to prevent duplication of effort and
wasted resources.
Rural hospital administrators and
community decision-makers need current information on strategies for
maintaining viability of their hospitals.
Specifically, eight areas were identified to support the existence
of rural hospitals. In each
of these areas, team members searched for electronic resources to aid
interested parties. Each
resource is annotated and linked through a website created by the
consultant team.
The team serving as information
consultants for this project is composed of graduate students at the
University of North Texas in the School of Library and Information
Science. This project
fulfills course requirements in the health informatics specialist
curriculum. The aim of the
consultant team is to provide a toolkit of electronic resources useful to
rural health care proponents.
The toolkit is offered at no
charge to rural hospital administrators and other interested parties. However, maintenance of the links and updates as new
resources become available are beyond the scope of the project. Therefore, it is the earnest desire of the creation team that
this information will be incorporated into the website of a rural health
care agency that will maintain the site.
This might be TORCH, a Texas AHEC, the Center for Rural Health
Initiatives, or an interested hospital.
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