Health care access barriers among metropolitan and nonmetropolitan populations of eight geographically diverse states, 2018

Author:

Zahnd Whitney E.12ORCID,Hung Peiyin2ORCID,Crouch Elizabeth L.2ORCID,Ranganathan Radhika2,Eberth Jan M.23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Management and Policy, College of Public Health University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

2. Rural and Minority Health Research Center, Arnold School of Public Health University of South Carolina Columbia South Carolina USA

3. Department of Health Management and Policy, Dornsife School of Public Health Drexel University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionNonmetropolitan populations face frequent health care access barriers compared to their metropolitan counterparts, but differences in the number of these barriers across groups are not known. Our objective was to examine the differences in health care access barriers across metropolitan, micropolitan, and noncore populations.MethodsWe used Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System data from the optional “Health Care Access” module to perform a cross‐sectional analysis examining access barriers across levels of rurality using bivariate analyses and Poisson models. Access barriers were operationalized as a count ranging from 0 to 5, reflective of the number of financial barriers and nonfinancial barriers.ResultsMicropolitan and noncore respondents had lower educational attainment, were older, and were less racially/ethnically diverse than metropolitan respondents. They also reported more barriers, including lacking health insurance, medical debt, and foregoing care or medication due to cost. These barriers were most pronounced in non‐Hispanic Black, Hispanic, and American Indian/Alaska Native nonmetropolitan populations, compared to their White counterparts. In adjusted analysis, micropolitan respondents reported more barriers compared to metropolitan (prevalence rate ratio = 1.06; 95% confidence interval: 1.02–1.10) as did women, racial/ethnic minority populations, and those with less education.ConclusionsMicropolitan populations experience more barriers to health care, and nonmetropolitan respondents report more cost‐related barriers than their metropolitan counterparts, raising concerns on health care disparities and financial burdens for these underserved populations. This underscores the need to mitigate these barriers, particularly among those in micropolitan areas and minorized populations.

Funder

Federal Office of Rural Health Policy

Publisher

Wiley

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