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- Title
A Comparison of Hospice Care Utilization Between Rural and Urban Children in Appalachia: A Geographic Information Systems Analysis.
- Authors
Svynarenko, Radion; Huang, Guoping; Keim-Malpass, Jessica; Cozad, Melanie J.; Qualls, Kerri A.; Stone Sharp, Whitney; Kirkland, Deb A.; Lindley, Lisa C.
- Abstract
Long driving times from hospice providers to patients lead to poor quality of care, which may exacerbate in rural and highly isolated areas of Appalachia. This study aimed to investigate geographic patterns of pediatric hospice care across Appalachia. Using person-level Medicaid claims of 1,788 pediatric hospice enrollees who resided in the Appalachian Region between 2011 and 2013. A database of boundaries of Appalachian counties, postal addresses of hospices, and population-weighted county centroids of residences of hospice enrollees driving times from the nearest hospices were calculated. A choropleth map was created to visualize rural/urban differences in receiving hospice care. The average driving time from hospice to child residence was 28 minutes (SD = 26). The longest driving time was in Eastern Kentucky—126 minutes (SD = 32), and the shortest was in South Carolina—11 min (SD = 9.1). The most significant differences in driving times between rural and urban counties were found in Virginia 28 (SD = 7.5) and 5 minutes (SD = 0), respectively, Tennessee—43 (SD = 28) and 8 minutes (SD = 7), respectively; and West Virginia—49 (SD = 30) and 12 minutes (SD = 4), respectively. Many pediatric hospice patients reside in isolated counties with long driving times from the nearest hospices. State-level policies should be developed to reduce driving times from hospice providers.
- Subjects
APPALACHIAN Region; HOSPICE care; GEOGRAPHIC information systems; RURAL conditions; TIME; RESEARCH methodology; PEDIATRICS; POPULATION geography; COMPARATIVE studies; T-test (Statistics); DESCRIPTIVE statistics; CHI-squared test; RESEARCH funding; METROPOLITAN areas; MEDICAID; DATA analysis software
- Publication
American Journal of Hospice & Palliative Medicine, 2024, Vol 41, Issue 3, p288
- ISSN
1049-9091
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/10499091231173415