Dr. Dale Essmeyer shows Milan High student Kaylee Michael how to take blood pressure.
Credit Jacob Fenston / KBIA
Students learn to avoid spreading disease with thorough hand-washing and glove-wearing.
Credit Jacob Fenston / KBIA
Students learn to take vital signs by practicing on one another.
Credit Jacob Fenston / KBIA
Downtown Albany.
Credit Jacob Fenston / KBIA
Katie Dias started in the Northwest Medical Center in seventh grade, as a "candy-striper." In August, she became hospital's first "home-grown" physician.
Credit Jacob Fenston / KBIA
Jon Doolittle is the hospital's CEO. He grew up in Albany (he was born in the hospital he now runs, played football in high school), but went east for college (Harvard). Last year he came back to where he says always felt like home.
In rural Missouri, there are roughly half as many primary care doctors per person, compared to urban parts of the state. That's a problem, when you consider that rural residents are also older (about three years, on average) and poorer (about five percent more live in poverty). In this Health & Wealth report, small towns in Missouri are facing the shortage by "growing their own" doctors and nurses, starting as early as middle school.
President Obama has been touring the country trying to sell voters on his American Jobs Act. According to the White House, the bill would, if passed, give the state of Missouri $700 million for transportation projects and cut the taxes of 120,000 Missouri businesses. And agriculture secretary Tom Vilsack says that rural areas in particular would benefit from the jobs bill. Vilsack spoke with KBIA’s Jacob Fenston.