Anderson Timothy J, Saman Daniel M, Lipsky Martin S, Lutfiyya M Nawal
Essentia Institute of Rural Health, 502 E. 2nd Street, Duluth, MN, 55805, USA.
Roseman University of Health Sciences, 10920 S. River Front Parkway, South Jordan, UT, 84095, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2015 Oct 1;15:441. doi: 10.1186/s12913-015-1053-3.
By examining 2013 County Health Rankings and Roadmaps data from the University of Wisconsin and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, this paper seeks to add to the available literature on health variances between United States residents living in rural and non-rural areas. We believe this is the first study to use the Rankings data to measure rural and urban health differences across the United States and therefore highlights the national need to address shortfalls in rural healthcare and overall health. The data indicates that U.S. residents living in rural counties are generally in poorer health than their urban counterparts.
We used 2013 County Health Rankings data to evaluate differences across the six domains of interest (mortality, morbidity, health behaviors, clinical care, social and economic factors, and physical environment) for rural and non-rural U.S. counties. This is a cross-sectional study employing chi-square analysis and logit regression.
We found that residents living in rural U.S. counties are more likely to have poorer health outcomes along a variety of measurements that comprise the County Health Rankings' indexed domains of health quality. These populations have statistically significantly (p ≤ 0.05) lower scores in such areas as health behavior, morbidity factors, clinical care, and the physical environment. We attribute the differences to a variety of factors including limitations in infrastructure, socioeconomic differences, insurance coverage deficiencies, and higher rates of traffic fatalities and accidents.
The largest differences between rural and non-rural counties were in the indexed domains of mortality and clinical care.
Our analysis revealed differences in health outcomes in the County Health Rankings' indexed domains between rural and non-rural U.S. counties. We also describe limitations and offer commentary on the need for more uniform measurements in the classification of the terms rural and non-rural. These results can influence practitioners and policy makers in guiding future research and when deciding on funding allocation.
通过研究来自威斯康星大学和罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会的2013年县健康排名与路线图数据,本文旨在补充现有关于美国农村和非农村地区居民健康差异的文献。我们认为这是第一项使用排名数据来衡量美国农村和城市健康差异的研究,因此凸显了全国范围内解决农村医疗保健和整体健康不足问题的必要性。数据表明,生活在农村县的美国居民总体健康状况通常比城市居民差。
我们使用2013年县健康排名数据来评估美国农村和非农村县在六个感兴趣领域(死亡率、发病率、健康行为、临床护理、社会和经济因素以及物理环境)的差异。这是一项采用卡方分析和逻辑回归的横断面研究。
我们发现,生活在美国农村县的居民在构成县健康排名健康质量索引领域的各种衡量标准下,更有可能出现较差的健康结果。这些人群在健康行为、发病因素、临床护理和物理环境等方面的得分在统计学上显著较低(p≤0.05)。我们将这些差异归因于多种因素,包括基础设施限制、社会经济差异、保险覆盖不足以及较高的交通死亡率和事故率。
农村和非农村县之间最大的差异在于死亡率和临床护理的索引领域。
我们的分析揭示了美国农村和非农村县在县健康排名索引领域的健康结果差异。我们还描述了局限性,并对农村和非农村术语分类中需要更统一的衡量标准发表了评论。这些结果可以影响从业者和政策制定者在指导未来研究以及决定资金分配时的决策。