| Literature DB >> 32197637 |
Nelson C Malone1, Mollie M Williams2,3, Mary C Smith Fawzi4, Jennifer Bennet5, Caterina Hill4, Jeffrey N Katz1, Nancy E Oriol1,4,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile health clinics serve an important role in the health care system, providing care to some of the most vulnerable populations. Mobile Health Map is the only comprehensive database of mobile clinics in the United States. Members of this collaborative research network and learning community supply information about their location, services, target populations, and costs. They also have access to tools to measure, improve, and communicate their impact.Entities:
Keywords: Health care access; Health disparities; Mobile clinics; Mobile health unit; Population health; Social determinants of health
Year: 2020 PMID: 32197637 PMCID: PMC7085168 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-020-1135-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Fig. 1Screenshot of portion of New Clinic Entry form
Fig. 2Mobile Health Clinics Affiliations. 286 clinics report on the affiliations or parent organizations. *Clinics may designate multiple affiliations
Fig. 3Reported Sources of Funding for Clinics. 281 clinics report on the sources of their funding. *Clinics may choose multiple sources of support
Age and Race/Ethnicity Distribution of Mobile Clinic Clients. 183 and 186 mobile clinics’ estimates of the percentage of clients visiting their clinics annually stratified by age and race/ethnicity, respectively
| 0–17 years old | 40.9% |
| 18–44 years old | 20.0% |
| 45–64 years old | 30.9% |
| 65+ years old | 10.5% |
| White (not Hispanic / Latino) | 41.5% |
| Black / African American | 35.3% |
| Hispanic / Latino | 26.6% |
| Mixed / Other | 4.1% |
| Asian | 2.8% |
| American Indians and Alaska Natives | 1.8% |
| Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders | 1.0% |
Fig. 4Two hundred ninety-one mobile clinics report on the specific groups they target. *Clinics may select more than one option
Fig. 5Services Reported by Mobile Clinics. 724 clinics reported on the serve type of their clinic. The “other specialty” category includes vision, asthma, maternal and infant health, disaster, homelessness, and other services
Number of Mobile Health Clinics by State. This table shows the number of mobile health clinics represented by each state on the Mobile Health Map
| Northeast | Midwest | South | West | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Connecticut | 6 | Illinois | 25 | Florida | 36 | Arizona | 21 |
| Maine | 7 | Indiana | 5 | Georgia | 16 | Colorado | 12 |
| Massachusetts | 29 | Michigan | 13 | Maryland | 14 | Idaho | 4 |
| New Hampshire | 4 | Ohio | 13 | North Carolina | 41 | Montana | 4 |
| Rhode Island | 3 | Wisconsin | 8 | South Carolina | 12 | Nevada | 1 |
| Vermont | 1 | Iowa | 2 | Virginia | 15 | New Mexico | 7 |
| Delaware | 3 | Kansas | 13 | District of Columbia | 3 | Utah | 2 |
| New Jersey | 9 | Minnesota | 9 | West Virginia | 4 | Wyoming | 2 |
| New York | 61 | Missouri | 15 | Alabama | 7 | Alaska | 2 |
| Pennsylvania | 16 | Nebraska | 4 | Kentucky | 11 | California | 120 |
| North Dakota | 3 | Mississippi | 7 | Hawaii | 13 | ||
| South Dakota | 3 | Tennessee | 15 | Oregon | 13 | ||
| Arkansas | 5 | Washington | 20 | ||||
| Louisiana | 23 | ||||||
| Oklahoma | 5 | ||||||
| *Puerto Rico | 1 | Texas | 61 |
Fig. 6Mobile Health Clinics Operating in the United States of America. This figure is a May 2017 screenshot of mobile clinics mapped by MobileHealthMap.org with 811 clinics representing all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and other nations globally. The red markers denote a single clinic. Circles represent a concentration of clinics (blue: < 10, yellow: 10+)