New research identifies health care access challenges of rural patients. Mayo clinic, University of Louisville School of Medicine researchers present intervention recommendations, including technology adoption for care, data collection
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Press release submission | May 24, 2022

Annals of Family Medicine: Mayo Clinic research identifies health care access challenges of rural patients

Mayo, University of Louisville School of Medicine researchers present intervention recommendations, including technology adoption for care, data collection 

ANN ARBOR, Mich., May 24, 2022 -- Rural residents face immense challenges to accessing health care services for chronic health conditions such as diabetes and cancer, which are associated with higher rates of disease-attributable deaths. Authors from the Mayo Clinic and the University of Louisville School of Medicine in Kentucky have just published a paper in Annals of Family Medicine that aggregates findings from 62 different studies to find commonalities in the health care experiences of patients with chronic conditions in U.S. rural settings.

Their paper is titled, "Rural Patient Experiences of Accessing Care for Chronic Conditions: A Systematic Review and Thematic Synthesis of Qualitative Studies."

First author Elizabeth H. Golembiewski, PhD, M.P.H., of the Knowledge and Evaluation Research Unit at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and her co-authors reviewed studies involving 1,354 unique participants. The greatest proportion of studies (24.2%) was focused on the experience of patients with cancer, followed by behavioral health (16.1%); HIV (14.5%); and diabetes (12.9%). 

Diabetes and cancer, as well as other chronic conditions, are more prevalent in rural communities compared to urban and suburban areas. The researchers found that important cultural, structural and individual factors influence the rural patient experience of health care access and utilization, including: 

  • Financial, time and physical costs associated with travel
  • Concerns with overburdening their support systems with frequent transportation requests
  • Frustration with lack of continuity due to frequent clinical rotations
  • Perceptions that local care is suboptimal
  • Culturally-enforced stigmas against seeking care
Golembiewski et al believe their findings can inform policies and programs that may improve access to care through culturally-appropriate interventions.

"Improving access to health care in rural communities is a national imperative," the authors assert, adding that future research should explore the role of telehealth and other remote technologies to address patient access challenges and to collect patient care data.

Rural Patient Experiences of Accessing Care for Chronic Conditions: A Systematic Review and Thematic Synthesis of Qualitative Studies
Elizabeth H. Golembiewski, Derek L. Gravholt, Victor D. Torres Roldan, Eddy P. Lincango Naranjo, Sebastian Vallejo, Andrea Garcia Bautista, Christina M. LaVecchia, Christi A. Patten, Summer V. Allen, Soumya Jaladi and Kasey R. Boehmer

Original source can be found here.

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