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Objective To develop a measure of social deprivation that is associated with health care access and health outcomes at a novel geographic level, primary care service area. Data Sources/Study Setting Secondary analysis of data from the D artmouth A tlas, AMA M asterfile, N ational P rovider I dentifier data, S mall A rea H ealth I nsurance E stimates, A merican C ommunity S urvey, A rea R esource F ile, and B ehavioural R isk F actor S urveillance S ystem. Data were aggregated to p rimary c are s ervice a reas ( PCSAs ). Study Design Social deprivation variables were selected from literature review and international examples. Factor analysis was used. Correlation and multivariate analyses were conducted between index, health outcomes, and measures of health care access. The derived index was compared with poverty as a predictor of health outcomes. Data Collection/Extraction Methods Variables not available at the PCSA level were estimated at block level, then aggregated to PCSA level. Principal Findings Our social deprivation index is positively associated with poor access and poor health outcomes. This pattern holds in multivariate analyses controlling for other measures of access. A multidimensional measure of deprivation is more strongly associated with health outcomes than a measure of poverty alone. Conclusions This geographic index has utility for identifying areas in need of assistance and is timely for revision of 35‐year‐old provider shortage and geographic underservice designation criteria used to allocate federal resources.
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Danielle Butler
Stephen Petterson
Robert L. Phillips
Health Services Research
Australian National University
Primary Health Care
American Academy of Family Physicians
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Butler et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69656dea4df53797795e37d3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2012.01449.x