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Lack Of Access To Specialists Associated With Mortality And Preventable Hospitalizations Of Rural Medicare Beneficiaries

Authors :
Kenton J. Johnston
Karen E. Joynt Maddox
Hefei Wen
Source :
Health affairs (Project Hope). 38(12)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

People living in rural areas have worse health outcomes than their urban counterparts do. Understanding what factors account for this could inform policy interventions for reducing rural-urban disparities in health. We examined a nationally representative survey of Medicare beneficiaries with one or more complex chronic conditions, which represented 61 percent of rural and 57 percent of urban Medicare beneficiaries. We found that rural residence was associated with a 40 percent higher preventable hospitalization rate and a 23 percent higher mortality rate, compared to urban residence. Having one or more specialist visits during the previous year was associated with a 15.9 percent lower preventable hospitalization rate and a 16.6 percent lower mortality rate for people with chronic conditions, after we controlled for having one or more primary care provider visits. Access to specialists accounted for 55 percent and 40 percent of the rural-urban difference in preventable hospitalizations and mortality, respectively. Medicare should consider interventions for rural beneficiaries who lack access to specialist care to reduce rural-urban disparities in health outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
15445208
Volume :
38
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health affairs (Project Hope)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e844b578a9c2a72f5085e1c5b84213f0