Background: Access to surgical specialty care differs based on geographic location, insurance status, and subspecialty type. This study uses the Inland Empire as a model to determine the relationship between Social Vulnerability Indices (SVIs), surgeon sex, and surgical subspecialty distribution.
Methods: 823 census tracts from the Centers for Disease Control's (CDC) SVI 2018 database were compared against 992 surgeons within 30 distinct subspecialties.
Background: The United States lacks equitable surgical access, prompting us to investigate whether there is an inverse relationship between Social Vulnerability Indices and the number of surgeons in a census tract, using the Inland Empire as a model.
Methods: The Centers for Disease Control's (CDC) SVI 2018 database, composed of 823 census tracts, was compared against demographics of 1008 surgeons, from the American Medical Association's (AMA) 2018 Physician Masterfile. Analysis was performed via Spearman's bivariate and multiple regression.
Background: Obesity rates are higher in children with intellectual and developmental disabilities (DD) compared to typically developing (TD) children. In TD children, family-based (FB) interventions for obesity are the most effective interventions. Research addressing obesity interventions for children with IDD is limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF