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Primary care, social inequalities and all-cause, heart disease and cancer mortality in US counties: a comparison between urban and non-urban areas

โœ Scribed by L. Shi; J. Macinko; B. Starfield; R. Politzer; J. Wulu; J. Xu


Book ID
116851743
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
135 KB
Volume
119
Category
Article
ISSN
0033-3506

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โœฆ Synopsis


Objective: The objective of this study was to test whether the association between primary care and income inequality on all-cause, heart disease and cancer mortality at county level differs in urban (Metropolitan Statistical Area-MSA) compared with non-urban (non-MSA) areas.

Study design:

The study consisted of a cross-sectional analysis of county-level data stratified by MSA and non-MSA areas in 1990. Dependent variables included age and sex-standardized (per 100,000) all-cause, heart disease and cancer mortality. Independent variables included primary care resources, income inequality, education levels, unemployment, racial/ethnic composition and income levels. Methods: One-way analysis of variance and multivariate ordinary least squares regression were employed for each health outcome. Results: Among non-MSA counties, those in the highest income inequality category experienced 11% higher all-cause mortality, 9% higher heart disease mortality, and 9% higher cancer mortality than counties in the lowest income inequality quartile, while controlling for other health determinants. Non-MSA counties with higher primary care experienced 2% lower all-cause mortality, 4% lower heart disease mortality, and 3% lower cancer mortality than non-MSA counties with lower primary care. MSA counties with median levels of income inequality experienced approximately 6% higher allcause mortality, 7% higher heart disease mortality, and 7% higher cancer mortality than counties in the lowest income inequality quartile. MSA counties with low primary care (less than 75th percentile) had significantly lower levels of all-cause, heart disease and cancer mortality than those counties with high primary care. Conclusions: In non-MSA counties, increasing primary physician supply could be one way to address the health needs of rural populations. In MSA counties, the association


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