Division of Pulmonary Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Rural Remote Health. 2024 Jan;24(1):8483. doi: 10.22605/RRH8483. Epub 2024 Jan 8.
In the US, health services research most often relies on Rural-Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) classification codes to measure rurality. This measure is known to misrepresent rurality and does not rely on individual experiences of rurality associated with healthcare inequities. We aimed to determine a patient-centered RUCA-based definition of rurality.
In this cross-sectional study, we conducted an online survey asking US residents, 'Do you live in a rural area?' and the rationale for their answer. We evaluated the concordance between their self-identified rurality and their ZIP code-derived RUCA designation of rurality by calculating Cohen's kappa (κ) statistic and percent agreement.
Of the 774 participants, 456 (58.9%) and 318 (41.1%) individuals had conventional urban and rural RUCA classifications, respectively. There was only moderate agreement between perceived rurality and rural RUCA classification (κ=0.48; 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.42-0.54). Among people living within RUCA 2-3 defined urban areas (n=51), percent agreement was only 19.6%. Discordance was driven by their perception of the population density, proximity to the nearest neighbor, proximity to a metropolitan area, and the number of homes in their area. Based on our results, we reclassified RUCA 2-3 designations as rural, resulting in an increase in overall concordance (κ=0.56; 95%CI=0.50-0.62).
Patient-centered rural-urban classification is required to effectively evaluate the impact of rurality on health disparities. This study presents a more patient-centric RUCA-based classification of rurality that can be easily operationalized in future research in situations in which self-reported rural status is missing or challenging to obtain.
Reclassification of RUCA 2-3 as rural represents a more patient-centric definition of rurality.
在美国,卫生服务研究通常依赖于农村-城市通勤区(RUCA)分类代码来衡量农村性。这种衡量方法被认为不能真实反映农村性,也不依赖于与医疗保健不平等相关的农村性的个体经验。我们旨在确定一种以患者为中心的基于 RUCA 的农村性定义。
在这项横断面研究中,我们进行了一项在线调查,询问美国居民“你是否居住在农村地区?”以及他们回答的理由。我们通过计算 Cohen's kappa(κ)统计量和百分比一致性来评估他们自我认定的农村性与他们邮政编码衍生的 RUCA 农村性分类之间的一致性。
在 774 名参与者中,456 名(58.9%)和 318 名(41.1%)个体分别具有传统的城市和农村 RUCA 分类。感知的农村性与农村 RUCA 分类之间只有中等程度的一致性(κ=0.48;95%置信区间[CI]=0.42-0.54)。在居住在 RUCA 2-3 定义的城市地区内的 51 人(n=51)中,百分比一致性仅为 19.6%。不一致是由他们对人口密度、与最近邻居的距离、与大都市区的距离以及他们所在地区的房屋数量的看法驱动的。基于我们的结果,我们重新分类了 RUCA 2-3 分类为农村,这导致整体一致性增加(κ=0.56;95%CI=0.50-0.62)。
需要以患者为中心的农村-城市分类来有效评估农村性对健康差异的影响。这项研究提出了一种更以患者为中心的基于 RUCA 的农村性分类,可以在未来研究中轻松实施,特别是在自我报告的农村地位缺失或难以获得的情况下。
将 RUCA 2-3 重新分类为农村代表了一种更以患者为中心的农村性定义。