Schroeder Mary C, Semprini Jason, Kahl Amanda R, Lizarraga Ingrid M, Birken Sarah A, Wahlen Madison M, Johnson Erin C, Gorzelitz Jessica, Seaman Aaron T, Charlton Mary E
Division of Health Services Research, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
J Rural Health. 2025 Jan;41(1):e12862. doi: 10.1111/jrh.12862. Epub 2024 Jul 4.
The Commission on Cancer (CoC) establishes standards to support multidisciplinary, comprehensive cancer care. CoC-accredited cancer programs diagnose and/or treat 73% of patients in the United States. However, rural patients may experience diminished access to CoC-accredited cancer programs. Our study evaluated distance to hospitals by CoC accreditation status, rurality, and Census Division.
All US hospitals were identified from public-use Homeland Infrastructure Foundation-Level Data, then merged with CoC-accreditation data. Rural-Urban Continuum Codes (RUCC) were used to categorize counties as metro (RUCC 1-3), large rural (RUCC 4-6), or small rural (RUCC 7-9). Distance from each county centroid to the nearest CoC and non-CoC hospital was calculated using the Great Circle Distance method in ArcGIS.
Of 1,382 CoC-accredited hospitals, 89% were in metro counties. Small rural counties contained a total of 30 CoC and 794 non-CoC hospitals. CoC hospitals were located 4.0, 10.1, and 11.5 times farther away than non-CoC hospitals for residents of metro, large rural, and small rural counties, respectively, while the average distance to non-CoC hospitals was similar across groups (9.4-13.6 miles). Distance to CoC-accredited facilities was greatest west of the Mississippi River, in particular the Mountain Division (99.2 miles).
Despite similar proximity to non-CoC hospitals across groups, CoC hospitals are located farther from large and small rural counties than metro counties, suggesting rural patients have diminished access to multidisciplinary, comprehensive cancer care afforded by CoC-accredited hospitals. Addressing distance-based access barriers to high-quality, comprehensive cancer treatment in rural US communities will require a multisectoral approach.
癌症委员会(CoC)制定标准以支持多学科、全面的癌症护理。获得CoC认证的癌症项目诊断和/或治疗了美国73%的患者。然而,农村患者获得CoC认证癌症项目的机会可能会减少。我们的研究根据CoC认证状态、农村地区和人口普查分区评估了到医院的距离。
从公共使用的国土基础设施基础数据中识别出所有美国医院,然后与CoC认证数据合并。农村-城市连续体代码(RUCC)用于将县分类为大都市(RUCC 1-3)、大农村(RUCC 4-6)或小农村(RUCC 7-9)。使用ArcGIS中的大圆距离方法计算每个县中心到最近的CoC和非CoC医院的距离。
在1382家获得CoC认证的医院中,89%位于大都市县。小农村县共有30家CoC医院和794家非CoC医院。对于大都市、大农村和小农村县的居民,CoC医院的位置分别比非CoC医院远4.0倍、10.1倍和11.5倍,而各组到非CoC医院的平均距离相似(9.4-13.6英里)。到获得CoC认证设施的距离在密西西比河以西最大,特别是山区(99.2英里)。
尽管各组到非CoC医院的距离相似,但CoC医院距离大、小农村县比大都市县更远,这表明农村患者获得CoC认证医院提供的多学科、全面癌症护理的机会减少。解决美国农村社区基于距离的高质量、全面癌症治疗的获取障碍将需要多部门方法。