DULUTH, Minn. — Five days a week, Dr. Karen Pajari drives from her home in Ely to start seeing her psychiatric patients at Range Mental Health Center in Virginia at 7:30 a.m.
Starting with in-house patients from the chemical dependency treatment center, she works through the day, but doesn't have time to do it all. By mid-June, she had patients scheduled through August and into September.
"I could do with about 10 hours more a day if I could stand it," Pajari said.
She enjoys her job, Pajari said, but admits "I've made several efforts to retire."
She's 71.
If there's any health-care shortage in rural areas that exceeds primary care, it's psychiatry, the Duluth News Tribune reported (http://bit.ly/15deXBI).
The Health Resources and Services Administration designates "health professional shortage areas" across the country in dentistry, primary care and mental health.
In Minnesota, all but the counties surrounding the Twin Cities and Rochester are designated as shortage areas for mental health. Although large, mostly rural areas of the state also are designated as shortages for primary care, there are more exceptions — including the immediate Duluth area and all of Lake County.