From Research and Farming, the 1948 annual
report of the North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station, N.C. State
College, Raleigh
In a sample survey of 500 rural families of eastern North
Carolina, C. Horace Hamilton and staff of the Department of Rural Sociology
found that 27 per cent of the families lived more than 10 miles from a doctor
and more than 20 miles from a hospital.
The families living at these distances from doctors and
hospitals had about the same amount of illness as other families. The survey
also showed that they use hospitals and doctors to about the same extent.
However, there were two important differences:
1)
The isolated families did not and frequently
could not get medical service in their homes; and
2)
If they did get a doctor make the trip, the
expense was greater.
Night Calls Higher
The cost of getting a doctor in the country varied with the
distance the patient lived from town. The average fee for one call at the
doctor’s office was found to be $2.80. The average fee for a home call in the
day was $7.12, and for a home call at night, $9.35. On the average, the cost of
a call to a patient’s home at night was 31 per cent greater than a daytime call
at the same distance.
On the average the cost of a home call in the country
started at $2.55 for no distance and increased at the rate of $.66 for each
mile the rural family lived from the doctor. This relationship may be tabled as
follows:
Cost of Doctor’s Visit to
Patient’s Home by Miles Traveled
|
|
Miles Traveled
|
Average Cost
|
0
|
$2.55
|
5
|
5.85
|
10
|
9.25
|
15
|
12.45
|
20
|
15.75
|
25
|
19.05
|
The initial cost of $2.55 for a home visit with no miles
traveled was about the same as the charge for an office visit.
Few Night Calls
Result
As a result of the high cost of home calls, especially at
night, there are very few such calls. Also there is an increasing tendency for
doctors to ask patients to come to their office or to the hospital. This not
only saves the doctor’s time but also makes it possible to use laboratory and
X-ray equipment which cannot be taken into the country.
Added to this trend in medical service is the fact that more
doctors are leaving the small country towns and are located at centers large
enough for hospitals. In view of this trend, the development of a rural
ambulance service and good rural roads become even more necessary.
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