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Access to care: Medical facilities on the rise across the High Country - Summit Daily News

Dr. Frank Laws joined Valley View Hospital in Glenwood Springs in 2006 and helped found the organization's heart and vascular catheterization laboratory.
Photo from Valley View Hospital

GLENWOOD SPRINGS — Specialized labs, a new heliport and cancer treatment options are just a few of the medical care improvements across the High Country and on the Western Slope in the past two decades.

By investing in staff, facilities and transportation, Valley View Hospital in Glenwood Springs reduced its patients’ need to travel for specialized care, said Dr. Frank Laws, an electrophysiologist and interventional cardiologist at Valley View.

On the other end of the Roaring Fork Valley, Aspen Valley Hospital consolidated several health care services into one campus, providing a single destination for its patients’ care needs, Aspen Valley CEO Dave Ressler said.

Many of Colorado’s recent leaps and strides toward better, more accessible health care were facilitated in part by the state’s expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act in 2013, said Cara Welch, the Colorado Hospital Association director of communications. 

Rural hospitals provide the foundation of health care throughout the state, but in the High Country and on the Western Slope, those hospitals can play an even larger role when required special services could mean an hourslong trip to Denver or Salt Lake City.

In the rare life-or-death situation, time spent on the road can play a deciding role in the outcome. On the flip side, people with special care needs — such as oncology, cardiology and chronic pain management — often choose where to live based on the services available in the area.

These factors combined with the rising cost of health care have contributed to a growing demand outside the metropolitan centers.

“Access to care is a major issue right now,” Laws explained. “A lot is economics, a lot of it is distance, but across the board the need is the same.”

A Flight for Life helicopter is pictured Thursday, Sept. 17, at St. Anthony Summit Medical Center in Frisco. While hospitals across the High Country and Western Slope are increasing their services, the heliport is important for patients who need emergency care that local hospitals cannot provide.
Photo by Liz Copan / Studio Copan

A focus on heart care

When Laws was hired on with Valley View in 2006, many of the hospital’s patients were traveling to Denver or out of state for some of their cardiology needs, he said. 

“I was recruited to enhance Valley View’s cardiovascular services and start a cardiac catheterization laboratory,” Laws explained. “Learning how far people had to travel for certain services and procedures was a big eye-opener when I came here.”

A cath lab is a facility with diagnostic imaging equipment used to visualize the heart’s arteries and chambers as well as treat any abnormalities found. 

As an interventional cardiologist, Laws provided the expertise needed to run the lab. Additionally, the facility drew more specialists to the hospital. Valley View’s cath lab was up and running by February 2007, just a few months after Laws arrived. 

The hospital also built a heliport in 2006, creating the ability to ensure patients with needs beyond the services provided could receive timely care.

“Prior to the heliport construction, if you needed to be transported anywhere by air, we had to take you by ambulance to the airport in Rifle and catch a flight from there,” Laws said.

During a yearlong sabbatical in 2014, Laws studied cardiac arrhythmia at the Tufts University School of Medicine. 

Upon returning to the Glenwood community with his newly earned expertise, Valley View was able to start treating atrial fibrillations, a chaotic arrhythmia that arises in the heart’s top left atrial cavity, Laws said.

“Atrial fibrillation is very common in the mountains because of the prevalence of sleep apnea,” he explained. 

The combination of services, specialists and equipment added since Laws’ arrival in Glenwood served to reduce travel times for patients but also attracted new patients from around the globe.

“The fact that we have created a destination program also provides an economic impetus for the area,” Laws said. “Having these services nearby reduces stress on the patients and the families that often have to care for them throughout treatment.”

Certified nurse midwife Taylor Morrison is pictured at High Country Healthcare in Frisco, on Thursday, Sept. 17.
Photo by Liz Copan / Studio Copan

Increased access to primary care

Three phases into a four-phase master facility plan, Aspen Valley has endeavored to consolidate Pitkin County’s health care services into one convenient location, Ressler said. 

“Our hospital’s vision is to foster our community as the healthiest in the nation,” he said. “We are looking at our social responsibility as a community-owned organization very differently than hospitals traditionally have in the past.”

As part of a special tax district, the hospital receives a portion of property taxes collected around Pitkin County to fund its operations. 

One of Aspen Valley’s tenets is increased access to primary care, which was a focus during its recent expansions.

“Nowadays, data and evidence better illustrate the amount of total health care costs that can be contributed to chronic conditions,” Ressler said. “By taking a more holistic approach, a primary care practice can have greater impacts on the individuals willing to manage their lifestyles.” 

Constructed in 1977, the hospital has undergone a number of expansions in recent years providing space for in-house ear, nose and throat services, expanded cardiology services, ophthalmology and primary practices.

The campus also leases space for general surgery, orthopedics, obstetrician/gynecologists, a pain clinic, rheumatology, pulmonology and endocrinology, Ressler said. 

“By locating practices here on the campus, a patient can have adequate parking and get all of their services done in one location,” he said. “Breast health is another example of where we have expanded. Our patients used to have to travel to Denver for breast biopsies and ultrasounds.”

While the pandemic reinforced the need for quality telehealth services, Aspen Valley was investing in its long-distance health care options prior to COVID-19.

Using an electronic platform, the hospital enhanced its abiliy to track medical records digitally.

“The improvements we made to our services in the last 10 years remove barriers to care,” Ressler said.

Nurse and clinical coordinator Natasha Bickmore, front, and nurse Christine Cleary are pictured in the Infusions Center of St. Anthony Summit Medical Center in Frisco on Thursday, Sept. 17. The center recently added Dr. David Biggs, an oncologist and hematologist.
Photo by Liz Copan / Studio Copan

Keeping hospitals open

Keeping Colorado’s rural hospitals open is one of the best ways to ensure residents maintain a high level of access to care, Welch said.

“We’ve seen a lot of rural hospital closures around the country, but that’s not happening here,” she said. “That is in large part because the state was quick to step up and expand Medicaid.”

A rural hospital has not closed in Colorado since the 1980s, according to the hospital association’s data.

Welch said community support and strong hospital leadership also played major roles in keeping Colorado’s hospitals open.

“Collaboration of our hospitals as a system is another factor,” Welch explained. “At times, they may compete for some business, but they collaborate in a number of ways that benefit all the hospitals throughout the state.”

Those efforts have paid off, particularly with reducing the need for patients to travel, Welch said.

“A lot of the higher acuity specialty care do still tend to come to the Denver metro area,” she said. “But all our hospitals have really focused on what services they need to provide their communities so people don’t have to travel as far.”

Editor’s note: This is Part 3 of a four-part series on longevity in the High Country. The series is being produced in partnership with The Aspen Times, Glenwood Springs Post Independent, Steamboat Pilot & Today and Vail Daily. Read more at SummitDaily.com/longevity.

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