Tags: Medicaid Cuts, Hospital Mental Health Units, Spencer Hospital, Inpatient Psychiatry, Iowa Mental Health, Medicaid Crisis, Rural Health Care, Behavioral Health, Suicide Prevention
Spencer Hospital Fights to Keep Mental Health Services Open
In Spencer, Iowa, Spencer Hospital stands as one of the last small hospitals in the state still offering inpatient psychiatric care—a service disappearing from many rural communities. As Medicaid cuts loom, the hospital’s commitment to mental health is being put to the test.
Medicaid’s Crucial Role in Mental Health
CEO Brenda Tiefenthaler reports that 40% of psychiatric patients at Spencer Hospital rely on Medicaid, far higher than the 12% of general inpatients. Another 10% are uninsured, placing even greater financial pressure on the hospital, which currently loses $2 million annually on its 14-bed psych unit.
Despite the loss, Tiefenthaler remains steadfast. “People with mental illness deserve the same level of care as those with chest pain,” she says.
Statewide Shortage, Rising Demand
Iowa, with just 760 staffed psychiatric beds across 3.2 million residents, falls short of the recommended 960–1,920 beds. Most are concentrated in metro areas, leaving rural patients stuck in ERs or jails, waiting for placement.
Clay County Sheriff Chris Raveling said his deputies sometimes drive up to six hours to transport patients. Many with minor charges related to mental illness are held in jail while awaiting care.
Delayed Care, Higher Risk
Mental health professionals warn that delayed treatment—especially for psychosis and depression—can have lifelong consequences. Dr. Jon Ulven of Sanford Health notes early intervention is key, and Medicaid often makes that possible.
A 2022 study linked higher suicide rates to states that didn’t expand Medicaid, highlighting the program’s impact on outcomes.
Hospitals Nationwide Feeling the Strain
According to the American Hospital Association, nearly 100 U.S. hospitals have closed their psychiatric units in the past decade. In 2024, 41% of psychiatric inpatients across a sample of hospitals were covered by Medicaid—far higher than for cancer or cardiac care.
Without Medicaid, hospitals would be forced to treat these patients with little to no reimbursement, pushing more facilities toward closure.
A Community’s Loss Is Everyone’s Loss
David Jacobsen of Spencer lost his son Alex to suicide in 2020. He credits the hospital’s mental health services for supporting Alex for years. “Cutting Medicaid hurts the people who need help the most,” he says.
His son’s obituary reads: “Mental illness is real. It doesn’t discriminate. It takes some of the best people down.”
Spencer Hospital continues to provide both psychiatric and birthing care, defying a national trend of closures. But as Medicaid faces potential funding cuts, the future of rural mental health care grows increasingly uncertain.
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