WILLIAMSTON, N.C. — Two years after her brother’s death, Debra Pierce still wonders whether the 50-year-old would have survived his heart attack if her local hospital hadn’t closed.
“The sad thing is we’ll never know if he could have been saved that night or not, because we don’t have a higher level of care in this county,” Pierce said as she stood outside the mobile home where she last hugged her brother. Emergency crews from a neighboring town worked on Stanley Sears for a half hour but couldn’t revive him for the long drive to the closest hospital, records show.
In the tall grass — which would be mowed if Sears were still alive — Pierce swiped through the photos on her phone. She stopped at a picture that showed Sears smiling.
Pierce chuckled and then sighed: “Bless him.” The local hospital had closed a year before Sears’ death, leaving behind a gutted healthcare system.
KFF Health News published a clinical update in Research Highlights on 22 May 2026.
The item focuses on Trump’s $50B Rural Health Bet Meets a Healthcare Desert in North Carolina.
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