地区层面的社会经济劣势与初级保健的可及性:快速回顾。

Health affairs scholar Pub Date : 2025-04-02 eCollection Date: 2025-04-01 DOI:10.1093/haschl/qxaf066
Jonathan A Staloff, Anna M Morenz, Sophia A Hayes, Ananya L Bhatia-Lin, Joshua M Liao
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引用次数: 0

摘要

健康的社会驱动因素在地理上聚集在一起,造成初级保健可缓解的卫生不公平现象。两个衡量社会劣势的区域级指标是区域剥夺指数和社会脆弱性指数。本快速综述旨在评估这些措施与初级保健可及性之间的关系。我们对截至2025年2月11日发表的美国研究进行了快速回顾。纳入的研究被分类为通过自我报告的初级保健获取、地理可及性或利用来定义初级保健获取。我们分析了31项研究,其中68% (N = 9/13地区剥夺指数,N = 12/18社会脆弱性指数)发现,更大的地区社会劣势与初级保健服务的可及性降低一致相关。这种关联在通过自我报告(N = 2/2)、疫苗接种(N = 5/7)以及在高社会经济劣势地区(N = 5/5)通过使用电话与视听或面对面初级保健的更高几率来测量初级保健获取的研究中得到了最一致的观察。这些发现对远程医疗支付政策和护理重新设计具有启示意义。医疗保险扩大的远程医疗报销可能到期,可能会不成比例地减少生活在高社会经济劣势地区的个人获得初级保健的机会。这些发现还支持需要采取社区一级干预措施,以增加获得初级保健接种的疫苗的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Area-Level socioeconomic disadvantage and access to primary care: A rapid review.

Social drivers of health aggregate geographically, contributing to health inequities that primary care access may mitigate. Two area-level measures of social disadvantage are the Area Deprivation Index and Social Vulnerability Index. This rapid review aimed to assess the association between these measures and primary care access. We conducted a rapid review of US studies published through February 11, 2025. Included studies were categorized as defining primary care access by self-reported access to primary care, geographic accessibility, or utilization. We analyzed 31 studies, of which 68% (N = 9/13 Area Deprivation Index, N = 12/18 Social Vulnerability Index) found that greater area-level social disadvantage was consistently associated with reduced primary care access. This association was most consistently observed in studies measuring primary care access via self-report (N = 2/2), vaccine uptake (N = 5/7), and via a higher odds of using telephone vs audio-visual or in-person primary care in areas of high socioeconomic disadvantage (N = 5/5). These findings have implications for telemedicine payment policy and care redesign. The possible expiration of Medicare's expanded telemedicine reimbursement may disproportionately reduce access points to primary care for individuals living in high socioeconomic disadvantage areas. These findings also support the need for community-level interventions to increase access to primary care administered vaccines.

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