Literature DB >> 10139173

Bypassing of local hospitals by rural Medicare beneficiaries.

W Buczko1.   

Abstract

Several previous studies of hospital utilization by nonelderly rural residents suggest that local rural hospitals have been increasingly bypassed, often for care in urban hospitals. This resulted in lost volume for rural hospitals, detracting from their financial viability. It is not clear to what extent elderly rural residents also bypass local hospitals and whether this reflects regionalization of treatment for some conditions or avoidance of local hospitals assumed to provide inadequate care. This study examines hospital use by aged rural Delaware Medicare beneficiaries living in a ZIP code area that has a local hospital during Fiscal Year (FY) 1987 (N = 670). Most of these Medicare beneficiaries were hospitalized locally. Those beneficiaries who bypassed local rural hospitals usually did so because cardiovascular surgical procedures were required and were often only performed in large urban teaching hospitals. Beneficiaries using nonlocal hospitals were similar to users of local hospitals with respect to age and sex and traveled an average of nearly 42 miles for treatment. "Bypassing" here appears to be due primarily to regional specialization of care rather than abandonment of local rural hospitals by rural residents.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 10139173     DOI: 10.1111/j.1748-0361.1994.tb00237.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Rural Health        ISSN: 0890-765X            Impact factor:   4.333


  7 in total

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Authors:  Chul-Young Roh; Keon-Hyung Lee; Myron D Fottler
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Journal:  Eur J Cancer Prev       Date:  2019-07       Impact factor: 2.497

6.  Estimating Heterogeneous Effects of a Policy Intervention across Organizations when Organization Affiliation is Missing for the Control Group: Application to the Evaluation of Accountable Care Organizations.

Authors:  Guanqing Chen; Valerie A Lewis; Daniel Gottlieb; A James O'Malley
Journal:  Health Serv Outcomes Res Methodol       Date:  2021-01-04

7.  A suite of methods for representing activity space in a healthcare accessibility study.

Authors:  Jill E Sherman; John Spencer; John S Preisser; Wilbert M Gesler; Thomas A Arcury
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  7 in total

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