Taking to the skies: How a doctor cares for patients in rural Colorado

Southeast Colorado Hospital District. Rural landscape under cumulus cloud-filled sky

Many daily commutes are on the ground — car, train, bikes — but what if you took to the air? Dr. Charles Frankum has spent over two decades flying himself to some of the most remote hospitals in Colorado and Kansas, including the Southeast Colorado Hospital District in Springfield, Colo. His daily four-hour commute in his plane showcases the need and complexity of providing critical medical care to rural communities.

Frankum's journey as a pilot-doctor began in 2003, driven by the need for an efficient way to reach multiple rural hospitals. His efforts have been crucial in towns like Springfield, where the Southeast Colorado Hospital District serves as a vital health care hub. “[Frankum] comes in once a month, and just since I’ve been here the last couple of years, I know numerous people he has found cancers on or snipped polyps off of,” said Heather Burdick, chief nursing officer and nursing home administrator at the Southeast Colorado Hospital District. “His work not only saves lives but also strengthens the health care systems in these small towns.”

“My work makes it so that only one person has to travel instead of all these other people having to travel,” said Frankum, “and it allows some very rural hospitals to turn their wheels and do procedures in their town.” Frankum’s efforts, and those of many other traveling physicians, ensure that residents of these rural areas receive the medical attention they need without having to travel long distances.

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