Abstract
Rural populations disproportionately suffer from adverse health outcomes, including poorer health and higher age-adjusted mortality. We argue that these disparities are due in part to declining health care provider availability and accessibility in rural communities. Rural challenges are exacerbated by “structural urbanism”—elements of the current public health and health care systems that disadvantage rural communities. We suggest that biases in current models of health care funding, which treat health care as a service for an individual rather than as infrastructure for a population, are innately biased in favor of large populations. Until this bias is recognized, the development of viable models for care across the rural-urban continuum cannot move forward.
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CITATION STYLE
Probst, J., Eberth, J. M., & Crouch, E. (2019). Structural urbanism contributes to poorer health outcomes for rural america. Health Affairs, 38(12), 1976–1984. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2019.00914
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