郊区的贫困和医疗安全网。

Research brief Pub Date : 2009-07-01
Laurie E Felland, Johanna R Lauer, Peter J Cunningham
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管在过去十年中郊区的贫困有所增加,但郊区低收入和无保险的人获得医疗保健服务的机会却没有跟上。根据卫生系统变化研究中心(HSC)对波士顿、克利夫兰、印第安纳波利斯、迈阿密和西雅图五个社区进行的一项新研究,由于交通不便、语言障碍和缺乏对医疗选择的认识,生活在郊区的低收入人群在获得医疗服务方面面临着重大挑战。低收入人群通常依赖于郊区医院的急诊科(ed)和城市安全网医院和保健中心。一些城市医疗服务提供者感到了照顾越来越多来自城市和郊区的病人的压力。城市和郊区的医疗服务提供者都在试图通过扩大初级保健能力、改善获得专家服务的机会、减少交通挑战和创造收入来支持安全网服务,将患者转移到他们居住地附近更合适的医疗服务。改善郊区安全网服务的努力受到郊区穷人在地理上更加分散以及在为安全网服务提供资金方面存在管辖权问题的阻碍。为了改善郊区安全网,政策制定者可能需要考虑灵活和有针对性的方法来提供护理,区域合作以共享资源,以及在为社区卫生中心和其他安全网服务和设施分配资源时考虑地理需求。
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Suburban poverty and the health care safety net.

Although suburban poverty has increased in the past decade, the availability of health care services for low-income and uninsured people in the suburbs has not kept pace. According to a new study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) of five communities--Boston, Cleveland, Indianapolis, Miami and Seattle--low-income people living in suburban areas face significant challenges accessing care because of inadequate transportation, language barriers and lack of awareness of health care options. Low-income people often rely on suburban hospital emergency departments (EDs) and urban safety net hospitals and health centers. Some urban providers are feeling the strain of caring for increasing numbers of patients from both the city and the suburbs. Both urban and suburban providers are attempting to redirect patients to more appropriate care near where they live by expanding primary care capacity, improving access to specialists, reducing transportation challenges, and generating revenues to support safety net services. Efforts to improve safety net services in suburban areas are hampered by greater geographic dispersion of the suburban poor and jurisdictional issues in funding safety net services. To improve the suburban safety net, policy makers may want to consider flexible and targeted approaches to providing care, regional collaboration to share resources, and geographic pockets of need when allocating resources for community health centers and other safety net services and facilities.

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If the price is right, most uninsured--even young invincibles--likely to consider new health insurance marketplaces. High and varying prices for privately insured patients underscore hospital market power. The surge in urgent care centers: emergency department alternative or costly convenience? Emergency preparedness and community coalitions: opportunities and challenges. Local public hospitals: changing with the times.
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