Affiliation:
1. University of Minnesota School of Social Work Falcon Heights Minnesota USA
2. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Boston Massachusetts USA
3. University of Minnesota School of Public Health Minneapolis Minnesota USA
Abstract
AbstractPurposeTo compare health care unaffordability in rural versus urban contexts while also examining the impact of sociodemographic/socioeconomic variables on this relationship.MethodsWe examined survey responses from the 2019‐2021 National Health Interview Survey (n = 90,761). We conducted chi‐squared tests comparing urban and rural subsamples and multivariable logistic regression analyses examining the associations between rurality and 3 measures of health care unaffordability while also including interactions between rurality and individual characteristics of respondents.FindingsIn bivariate analyses, compared to their urban counterparts, rural residents were more likely to report problems paying medical bills (15.0% vs 11.5%, P <.001) and being unable to pay medical bills (9.3% vs 7.1%, P < .001). In fully adjusted multivariable regression analyses, rural residents were significantly less likely than their urban counterparts to report being worried about paying medical bills (AOR: .915, CI: .871‐.961, P < .001). We found significant interactions between rural residency and insurance type, age, income to poverty ratio, and race/ethnicity for the outcome of problems paying medical bills; and significant interactions between rural residency and income to poverty ratio and race and ethnicity for the outcome of being unable to pay medical bills.ConclusionRural residents report higher rates of 2 measures of health care unaffordability as compared to their urban counterparts. In multivariable logistic models, rural residency is not associated with higher rates of health care unaffordability; however, significant interactions exist between rural residency and individual variables demonstrating the heterogenous experiences of health care unaffordability based on these intersectional identities.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
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