It took the ambulance 53 minutes to arrive. By then, Raymond Miller, 58, was gone. He’d collapsed at his home in Clovis, a rural town in New Mexico.
The town’s only hospital closed six months ago after state level budget cuts, turning emergency care into a logistical nightmare.
His wife called 911 four times.
“He was still breathing after the second call,” she said. “By the fourth, I was screaming at them just to come.”
This isn’t an isolated story. It’s happening in rural America, quietly, painfully where lives are being lost not to disease or disaster, but to political choices.
Also Read: UK Plans to Map Every Baby’s DNA to Catch Illnesses Before They Start
Follow us on X @Dobblog1
No comments:
Post a Comment
Join the conversation by leaving a comment below. Keep it respectful, relevant, and on-topic - we love hearing from our readers!