Himes C L, Rutrough T S
Population Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park 16802.
J Rural Health. 1994 Spring;10(2):80-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-0361.1994.tb00214.x.
This study examined the importance of place of residence on the elderly's use of health services through Andersen's framework of health service utilization. The study found that nonmetropolitan elderly, both farm and nonfarm, make fewer physician visits than their metropolitan counterparts. This difference is not explained by differences in their predisposing or need characteristics. No residential differences were found in the number of short-term hospital stays or in the number of days of bed disability. No evidence was found that nonmetropolitan elderly substitute days of bed disability for physician care or for hospital stays. Also, little residential variation was found in the effect of predisposing, enabling, and need factors on physician use. The most likely explanation for the observed differences in physician use is the shortage of physicians in nonmetropolitan areas. However, without the ability to attach contextual information to national data on health status and service use, the relative importance of access to services cannot be adequately addressed.
本研究通过安德森的卫生服务利用框架,考察了居住地对老年人卫生服务利用的重要性。研究发现,非大都市地区的老年人,无论是农村还是非农村地区的,比大都市地区的老年人看医生的次数更少。这种差异并不能通过他们的易患因素或需求特征的差异来解释。在短期住院次数或卧床残疾天数方面未发现居住地差异。没有证据表明非大都市地区的老年人用卧床残疾天数替代看医生或住院。此外,在易患因素、促成因素和需求因素对医生利用的影响方面,几乎没有发现居住地差异。观察到的医生利用差异最可能的解释是非大都市地区医生短缺。然而,由于无法将背景信息附加到关于健康状况和服务利用的国家数据上,服务可及性的相对重要性无法得到充分解决。