Efforts by critical access hospitals to increase health equity through greater engagement with social determinants of health

Author:

Lemont Bethany1,Puro Neeraj2ORCID,Franz Berkeley3ORCID,Cronin Cory E.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Economics Department Ohio University College of Arts & Sciences; Appalachian Institute to Advance Health Equity Science Athens Ohio USA

2. Management‐Health Administration Florida Atlantic University College of Business Boca Raton Florida USA

3. Department of Social Medicine Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine; Appalachian Institute to Advance Health Equity Science Athens Ohio USA

4. Department of Social and Public Health Ohio University College of Health Sciences and Professions; Appalachian Institute to Advance Health Equity Science Athens Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeGreater health care engagement with social determinants of health (SDOH) is critical to improving health equity. However, no national studies have compared programs to address patient social needs among critical access hospitals (CAHs), which are lifelines for rural communities. CAHs generally have fewer resources and receive governmental support to maintain operations. This study considers the extent to which CAHs engage in community health improvement, particularly upstream SDOH, and whether organizational or community factors predict involvement.MethodsUsing descriptive statistics and Poisson regression, we compared 3 types of programs (screening, in‐house strategies, and external partnerships) to address the patient social needs between CAHs and non‐CAHs, independent of key organizational, county, and state factors.FindingsCAHs were less likely than non‐CAHs to have programs to screen patients for social needs, address unmet social needs of patients, and enact community partnerships to address SDOH. When we stratified hospitals according to whether they endorsed an equity‐focused approach as an organization, CAHs matched their non‐CAH counterparts on all 3 types of programs.ConclusionsCAHs lag relative to their urban and non‐CAH counterparts in their ability to address nonmedical needs of their patients and broader communities. While the Flex Program has shown success in offering technical assistance to rural hospitals, this program has mainly focused on traditional hospital services to address patients’ acute health care needs. Our findings suggest that organizational and policy efforts surrounding health equity could bring CAHs in line with other hospitals in terms of their ability to support rural population health.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference43 articles.

1. The Rural Hospital Problem

2.  RHIhub.Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs).2022. Accessed January 6 2023.https://www.ruralhealthinfo.org/topics/critical‐access‐hospitals

3. Equity as a Guiding Theme in Hospitals’ Community Health Needs Assessments

4. Neighborhoods and health: where are we and were do we go from here?

5. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).Healthy People 2030.CDC;2021.

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