The Importance of Rural Health |
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| The obstacles faced by health care providers and patients in rural areas
are vastly different that those in urban areas. Rural Americans face a
unique combination of factors that create disparities in health care not
found in urban areas. Economic factors, cultural and social differences,
educational shortcomings, lack of recognition by legislators and the sheer
isolation of living in remote rural areas all conspire to impede rural
Americans in their struggle to lead a normal, healthy life. Some of these
factors, and their effects are listed below. |
- Only about ten percent of physicians practice in rural America despite the fact that one-fourth of the population lives in theses areas.**
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- Rural residents are less likely to have employer-provided health care coverage or prescription drug coverage, and the rural poor are less likely to be covered by Medicaid benefits than their urban counterparts.
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- Although only one-third of all motor vehicle accidents occur in rural
areas, two-thirds of the deaths attributed to these accidents occur
on rural roads.**
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- Rural residents are nearly twice as likely to die from unintentional
injuries other than motor vehicle accidents than are urban residents.
Rural residents are also at a significantly higher risk of death by
gunshot than urban residents.
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- Rural residents tend to be poorer. On the average, per capital income is $7,417 lower than in urban areas, and rural Americans are more likely to live below the poverty level. The disparity in incomes is even greater for minorities living in rural areas. Nearly 24% of rural children live in poverty.
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- There are 2,157 Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSA's) in rural and frontier areas of all states and US territories compared to 910 in urban areas. **
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- Abuse of alcohol and use of smokeless tobacco is a significant problem among rural youth. The rate of DUI arrests is significantly greater in non-urban counties. Forty percent of rural 12th graders reported using alcohol while driving compared to 25% of their urban counterparts. Rural eighth graders are twice as likely to smoke cigarettes (26.1% versus 12.7% in large metro areas.)**
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- Anywhere from 57 to 90 percent of first responders in rural areas are volunteers.**
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- There are 60 dentists per 100,000 population in urban areas versus
40 per 100,000 in rural areas.**
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- Cerebrovascular disease was reportedly 1.45 higher in non-Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) than in MSAs.**
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- Hypertension was also higher in rural than urban areas (101.3 per 1,000 individuals in MSAs and 128.8 per 1,000 individuals in non-MSAs.)**
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- Twenty percent of non metropolitan counties lack mental health services
versus five percent of metropolitan counties. In 1999, 87 percent
of the 1,669 Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas in the united
States were in non-metropolitan counties and home over 30 million
people.**
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- The suicide rate among rural men is significantly higher than in urban areas, particularly among adult men and children. The suicide rate among rural women is escalating rapidly and is approaching that of men.**
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- Medicare payments to rural hospitals and physicians are dramatically
less than those to their urban counterparts for equivalent services.
This correlates closely with the fact that more than 470 rural hospitals
have closed in the past 25 years.
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- Medicare patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) who were
treated in rural hospitals were less likely than those treated in
urban hospitals to receive recommended treatments and had significantly
higher adjusted 30-day post AMI death rates from all causes than those
in urban hospitals. ***
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- Rural residents have greater transportation difficulties reaching
health care providers, often traveling great distances to reach a
doctor or hospital.
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- Death and serious injury accidents account for 60 percent of total
rural accidents versus only 48 percent of urban. One reason for this
increased rate of morbidity and mortality is that in rural areas,
prolonged delays can occur between a crash, the call for EMS, and
the arrival of an EMS provider. Many of these delays are related to
increased travel distances in rural areas and personnel distribution
across the response area. National average response times from motor
vehicle accident to EMS arrival in rural areas was 18 minutes, or
eight minutes greater than in urban areas.**
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| Sources: |
**Rural Healthy People 2010 - "Healthy People 2010: A Companion Document for Rural Areas," is a project funded with grant support from the federal Office of Rural Health Policy. The full document is available for download at the following site: http://www.srph.tamushsc.edu/rhp2010/
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***WWAMI Rural Health Research
Center study, funded by the Federal Office of Rural Health Policy, described
in:
Baldwin L-M, MacLehouse RF, Hart LG, Beaver SK, Every N. Chan L: Quality of care for acute myocardial infarction in rural and urban hospitals. Journal of Rural Health 2004; 20(2): 99-108.
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For more information on WWAMI projects and publications, visit www.fammed.washington.edu/wwamirhrc
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Rural Health in the United States - 1999
Thomas C. Ricketts III, Editor
Oxford University Press
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Health,
United States, 2001 Urban and Rural Chart book.., 2001
Centers For Disease Control |
Rural
Information Center Health Service (RICHS) Web site
http://www.nal.usda.gov/ric/
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LRHA would like to thank
the National Rural Health Association for providing us with the above
statistics.
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Send comments to the
© 2007 Louisiana Rural Health Association |