AI Article Synopsis

  • Rural areas have limited access to dialysis care compared to urban areas, leading to disparities in treatment options and quality due to facility shortages and healthcare provider shortages.
  • Data from 3,141 counties in the USA revealed that while a significant percentage of facilities offer peritoneal and home dialysis, these services are more common in urban areas, and rural facilities often report lower quality ratings.
  • High-need rural counties, characterized by higher rates of chronic diseases, are less likely to have access to quality dialysis facilities, highlighting the need for targeted healthcare interventions and educational programs in these communities.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Rural areas face significant disparities in dialysis care compared to urban areas due to limited access to dialysis facilities, longer travel distances, and a shortage of healthcare professionals. The objective of this study was to conduct a national examination of rural-urban differences in quality of dialysis care offered across counties in the USA.

Methods: Data were gathered from Medicare-certified dialysis facilities in 2020 from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services website. To identify high-need counties, county-level estimated crude prevalence of diabetes in adults was obtained from the 2022 CDC PLACES data portal. Our analysis reviewed 3,141 counties in the USA. The primary outcome measured was whether the county had a dialysis facility. Among those counties that had a dialysis facility, additional outcomes were the average star rating, whether peritoneal dialysis was offered, and whether home dialysis was offered.

Results: The type of services offered by dialysis facilities varied significantly, with peritoneal dialysis being the most commonly offered service (50.8%), followed by home hemodialysis (28.5%) and late-shift services (16.0%). These service availabilities are more prevalent in urban facilities than in rural facilities. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Five Star Quality ratings were quite different between urban and rural facilities, with 40.4% of rural facilities having a ranking of five, compared to 27.1% in urban.

Conclusion: The majority of rural counties lack a single dialysis facility. Counties with high rates of chronic kidney disease, diabetes, and blood pressure, deemed high need, were less likely to have a highly rated dialysis facility. The findings can be used to further inform targeted efforts to increase diabetes educational programming and design appropriate interventions to those residing in rural communities and high-need counties who may need it the most.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000537763DOI Listing

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