Lead researcher Richard Shellenberger, an internal medicine specialist at Trinity Health Ann Arbor Hospital in Ypsilanti, told Freedman, “The lack of doctors in rural areas was a significant factor. It takes a special person to say, ‘I want to practice in the Upper Peninsula; I want to practice in rural Northern Lower Peninsula.’”
3D structure of a melanoma cell derived by ion abrasion scanning electron microscopy. (Image from Unsplash) |
If cancer is diagnosed late, it is more likely to be severe. Dearborn dermatologist Karen Chapel told Freedman, “The more deeply melanomas invade the skin, the higher their risk of metastasizing – spreading to internal organs – and being deadly."
Steven Daveluy, professor at the Wayne State University School of Medicine, told Freedman that rural residents are more than three times as likely to work outdoors than their urban counterparts, increasing their exposure to the sun,
While there is a national dermatologist shortage, the lack is more acutely felt in rural areas. Daveluy gave Freedman an example of a farmer he treated: "After years of sun exposure working outdoors, he found an open sore that wouldn’t heal on his scalp. He didn’t like to go to doctors, plus he was busy working his farm to keep everything running, so he delayed coming to get treatment. When he did come, the sore had grown significantly. Due to his delay in seeking care, his surgery was more extensive.”
Chapel and Shellenberger gave Freeman a short list of items that could help ease the medical care gap between rural and urban areas, which included telehealth, incentives for rural rotations by medical students, and government support for new physicians entering rural communities with a focus on specialty physicians.
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