I think it would make a huge difference, in that this scenario should put some of those services back into rural communities. In terms of the lost health care services in rural communities, women are doing an awful lot of backfilling there--running their parents into the city for doctors appointments, looking after their day-to-day needs. One of the women who works with me goes to see her mother every day at noon. It reduces her mobility in terms of a job and so on.
This loss of services is really critical, both from a service perspective and also from an employment perspective, because the good jobs in rural communities were teachers and nurses and those kinds of jobs, in which they got decent wages.