Quantifying rural disparity in healthcare utilization in the United States: Analysis of a large midwestern healthcare system

The objective of this study is to identify how predisposing characteristics, enabling factors, and health needs are jointly and individually associated with epidemiological patterns of outpatient healthcare utilization for patients who already interact and engage with a large healthcare system. We r...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2022-02, Vol.17 (2), p.e0263718-e0263718
Hauptverfasser: Nuako, Akua, Liu, Jingxia, Pham, Giang, Smock, Nina, James, Aimee, Baker, Timothy, Bierut, Laura, Colditz, Graham, Chen, Li-Shiun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The objective of this study is to identify how predisposing characteristics, enabling factors, and health needs are jointly and individually associated with epidemiological patterns of outpatient healthcare utilization for patients who already interact and engage with a large healthcare system. We retrospectively analyzed electronic medical record data from 1,423,166 outpatient clinic visits from 474,674 patients in a large healthcare system from June 2018-March 2019. We evaluated patients who exclusively visited rural clinics versus patients who exclusively visited urban clinics using Chi-square tests and the generalized estimating equation Poisson regression methodology. The outcome was healthcare use defined by the number of outpatient visits to clinics within the healthcare system and independent variables included age, gender, race, ethnicity, smoking status, health status, and rural or urban clinic location. Supplementary analyses were conducted observing healthcare use patterns within rural and urban clinics separately and within primary care and specialty clinics separately. Patients in rural clinics vs. urban clinics had worse health status [χ2 = 935.1, df = 3, p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0263718