Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland.
JAMA Surg. 2014 Jun;149(6):537-43. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2013.5062.
Although early detection and treatment of colorectal cancer has been shown to improve outcomes, geographic proximity may influence access to these services.
To examine the disparities that may exist in colorectal cancer screening and treatment by comparing the distribution of providers of these services in rural and urban counties in the United States.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A retrospective population-based study using data obtained from the 2009 Area Resource File for the entire US population within each county.
Counties in the United States were categorized as rural or urban using rural-urban continuum codes as our primary exposure. The proportion of gastroenterologists, general surgeons, and radiation oncologists per 100,000 people in each county was estimated as primary outcomes. Multivariate linear regression analysis adjusted for county-level socioeconomic variables, such as percentages of females, blacks, population without insurance, those with a high school diploma, and median household income, to estimate the relative density of each category of these providers between urban and rural counties.
In total, 3220 counties were identified, comprising 1807 rural and 1413 urban counties. An unadjusted analysis showed an increased density of gastroenterologists, general surgeons, and radiation oncologists per 100,000 people in urban vs rural counties. A multivariable analysis revealed a significantly higher density of gastroenterologists (1.63; 95% CI, 1.40-1.85; P < .001), general surgeons (2.01; 95% CI, 1.28-2.73; P < .001), and radiation oncologists (0.68; 95% CI, 0.59-0.77; P < .001) per 100,000 people living in urban vs rural counties.
A rural-urban disparity exists in the density of gastroenterologists, general surgeons, and radiation oncologists who traditionally provide colorectal cancer screening services and treatment. This might affect access to these services and may negatively influence outcomes for colorectal cancer in rural areas.
虽然已经证明早期发现和治疗结直肠癌可以改善预后,但地理接近程度可能会影响获得这些服务的机会。
通过比较美国农村和城市县提供这些服务的提供者的分布情况,研究结直肠癌筛查和治疗中可能存在的差异。
设计、地点和参与者:一项使用从美国每个县的 2009 年区域资源文件中获得的数据进行的回顾性基于人群的研究。
我们将美国的县分为农村或城市,使用农村-城市连续统一体代码作为主要暴露因素。根据每县每 10 万人中胃肠病学家、普通外科医生和放射肿瘤学家的比例来估计主要结果。使用多变量线性回归分析调整了县一级的社会经济变量,如女性、黑人、无保险人口、高中文凭人口和家庭中位数收入的百分比,以估计城乡县之间每类这些提供者的相对密度。
总共确定了 3220 个县,包括 1807 个农村县和 1413 个城市县。未经调整的分析显示,城市县每 10 万人中胃肠病学家、普通外科医生和放射肿瘤学家的密度增加。多变量分析显示,城市县胃肠病学家(1.63;95%CI,1.40-1.85;P<.001)、普通外科医生(2.01;95%CI,1.28-2.73;P<.001)和放射肿瘤学家(0.68;95%CI,0.59-0.77;P<.001)的密度明显高于农村县。
在传统提供结直肠癌筛查服务和治疗的胃肠病学家、普通外科医生和放射肿瘤学家的密度方面,存在城乡差异。这可能会影响获得这些服务的机会,并可能对农村地区结直肠癌的结果产生负面影响。