Author:
Buchanan Robert J.,Schiffer Randolph,Stuifbergen Alexa,Zhu Li,Wang Suojin,Chakravorty Bonnie J.,Kim MyungSuk
Abstract
This study compares demographic and disease-related characteristics of people with multiple sclerosis (MS) living in urban and rural areas. The data analyzed for this study were collected from a survey of 1518 people with MS living throughout the United States from October 2004 through January 2005. We found significant urban-rural differences in various MS characteristics, including type of MS. A significantly larger proportion of people with MS in remote rural areas than their urban counterparts responded that they had primary progressive MS. People with MS in rural areas were significantly more likely than those in urban areas to report that MS symptoms interfered with their independence. A significantly larger proportion of people with MS in remote rural areas than in urban areas were not receiving disease-modifying medications. Our results suggest that MS disease expression varies across urban-rural gradients. Although the findings are not definitive, we hope that other investigative groups will build on these results and work toward confirming and understanding them.
Publisher
Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers
Subject
Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Neurology (clinical)
Cited by
15 articles.
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