Rural Public Health

RURAL PUBLIC HEALTH

There are two common methods used to determine if an area may be properly defined as "rural." The first is based on population density and defines a community of under 2,500 people as rural. The other approach involves the designation of counties as being either "metropolitan" or "nonmetropolitan." The principal criterion for considering a county metropolitan is the presence of a city with 50,000 or more inhabitants within the county. Using this definition, which is more popular with organizational and planning groups due to a greater availability of data, nearly one-fourth of the residents of the United States live in nonmetropolitan counties, and the number of nonmetropolitan counties is much greater than the number of metropolitan counties. In 1998, this translated to approximately 54 million people living in rural America.

Rural communities may be at greater public health risk because of certain geographic and demographic characteristics. Compared to urban and suburban areas, residents of rural communities have lower average total incomes, higher unemployment rates, lower educational levels, poorer housing, increased levels of poverty, and a greater proportion of elderly in their midst. Rural economies are more likely to be dependent upon a single industry. The lack of other industry to take up the slack when the singular principal economic activity is stressed can lead to abrupt shifts in economic well-being and to population migration away from the area.

The lower population density in rural areas plays a prime role in the breadth and scope of health systems that are developed there. Access to health care is often problematic. The relative paucity of health professionals in these areas makes it difficult for residents to reach health care providers, particularly medical and dental specialists, physical therapists, and a variety of other practitioners. There are few health care facilities that can manage acute or chronic health conditions, and at times even primary care is difficult to access. The loss of a physician or a health care facility may cause a major disruption in a rural community's health care system.

A number of financial factors can create barriers to health care in rural settings. Medicaid eligibility is often more restricted by rural states; the percentage of uninsured individuals in rural areas is growing; and income for rural family physicians is 15 percent lower than for their urban counterparts, though they tend to see more patients and work longer hours.

Rural minorities lag behind rural whites and urban minorities on many crucial economic and social measures. These disparities, in addition to inadequate community organizational and network resources supportive of minorities, are formidable barriers to rural minorities seeking to access and utilize the already limited health system.


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