Date of Award
Spring 2025
Degree Type
Thesis
Department
Health Promotion, Education and Behavior
Director of Thesis
Nathaniel Bell, PhD
Second Reader
Melinda A. Merrell, PhD, MPH
Abstract
Rural hospital closures have become an increasingly urgent issue in healthcare across the United States. These closures have impacted access to healthcare, the job market, and general community health. Most hospitals have been forced to close due to low patient volumes, financial struggles, and corporate ownership. Immediate implications of closures include the displacement of healthcare workers, community concern about lacking a central healthcare facility, and increased travel times to access care.
This thesis examines South Carolina’s healthcare landscape in areas with hospital closures since 2012 and explores the effects of and responses to these closures as discussed in newspapers and academic literature. The emphasis is placed on the current state of the former hospital location, the immediate effects of the closure, and the descriptions of these effects as described by locals and professionals in their respective media outlets. This study seeks to examine how these closures are perceived by the public and academic professionals based on the content of the media they engage with.
First Page
1
Last Page
69
Recommended Citation
Harper, Morgan, "Shifting Healthcare in Rural South Carolina: A Study of Media Coverage of the Effects of Hospital Closures" (2025). Senior Theses. 765.
https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/senior_theses/765
Rights
© 2025, Morgan Harper
Included in
Community Health and Preventive Medicine Commons, Health Services Research Commons, Medical Education Commons, Other Public Health Commons, Public Health Education and Promotion Commons