The Georgia Senate’s study committee on barriers to access to health care had its final meeting Monday, and is expected to issue recommendations later this year for the coming legislative session.

A key subject is whether highly trained nurses should be allowed more independence in conducting health care. Nursing groups say Georgia is too restrictive, and allowing them to prescribe and order tests more freely could fill gaps, especially in underserved areas.

The state’s largest doctors’ lobby, however, argues that patient cases can be complex especially when the patient has lacked care, and such cases deserves a doctor’s expertise.

The one subject all agree on is Georgia faces a critical shortage of doctors and health care providers generally, especially in rural areas.  Women may travel 80 to 100 miles to get prenatal care.  In 13 Georgia counties there is no mental health professional of any kind.

Sen. Larry Walker III, R-Perry, who sits on the study committee, said afterward that he thought the nurses would be better than nothing in some areas.  But “I think it’ll be a lot of opposition,” he added.

AJC editor Kevin Riley spoke with the Georgia delegation at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio on July 21, 2016.

About the Author

Keep Reading

The SNAP program provided benefits to about 13% of Georgia’s population, 1.4 million people, during the 2024 fiscal year. (Associated Press)

Credit: Sipa USA via AP

Featured

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens (right) tours the Vine City neighborhood with his senior advisor Courtney English (left). (Matt Reynolds/AJC 2024)

Credit: Matt Reynolds