Out Of Reach: Inequities In The Use Of High-Quality Home Health Agencies

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Abstract

Patients receiving home health services from high-quality home health agencies often experience fewer adverse outcomes (for example, hospitalizations) than patients receiving services from low-quality agencies. Using administrative data from 2016 and regression analysis, we examined individual-and neighborhood-level racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic factors associated with the use of high-quality home health agencies. We found that Black and Hispanic home health patients had a 2.2-percentage-point and a 2.5-percentage-point lower adjusted probability of high-quality agency use, respectively, compared with their White counterparts within the same neighborhoods. Low-income patients had a 1.2-percentage-point lower adjusted probability of high-quality agency use compared with their higher-income counterparts, whereas home health patients residing in neighborhoods with higher proportions of marginalized residents had a lower adjusted probability of high-quality agency use. Some 40–77 percent of the disparities in high-quality agency use were attributable to neighborhood-level factors. Ameliorating these inequities will require policies that dismantle structural and institutional barriers related to residential segregation.

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Fashaw-Walters, S. A., Rahman, M., Gee, G., Mor, V., White, M., & Thomas, K. S. (2022). Out Of Reach: Inequities In The Use Of High-Quality Home Health Agencies. Health Affairs, 41(2), 247–255. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2021.01408

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