Quality of prostate cancer care among rural men in the Veterans Health Administration

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Abstract

BACKGROUND Patient travel distances, coupled with variation in facility-level resources, create barriers for prostate cancer care in the Veterans Health Administration integrated delivery system. For these reasons, the authors investigated the degree to which these barriers impact the quality of prostate cancer care. METHODS The Veterans Affairs Central Cancer Registry was used to identify all men who were diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2008. Patient residence was characterized using Rural Urban Commuting Area codes. The authors then examined whether rural residence, compared with urban residence, was associated with less access to cancer-related resources and worse quality of care for 5 prostate cancer quality measures. RESULTS Approximately 25% of the 11,368 patients who were diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2008 lived in either a rural area or a large town. Rural patients tended to be white (62% urban vs 86% rural) and married (47% urban vs 63% rural), and they tended to have slightly higher incomes (all P

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Skolarus, T. A., Chan, S., Shelton, J. B., Antonio, A. L., Sales, A. E., Malin, J. L., & Saigal, C. S. (2013). Quality of prostate cancer care among rural men in the Veterans Health Administration. Cancer, 119(20), 3629–3635. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.28275

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