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Transportation Barriers to Health Care in the United States: Findings From the National Health Interview Survey, 1997–2017
by
Holmes, G. Mark
, McDonald, Noreen C.
, Wolfe, Mary K.
in
Access to Care
/ Adults
/ AJPH Surveillance
/ Americans with Disabilities Act 1990-US
/ Baby boomers
/ Barriers
/ Chronic conditions
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Community Health
/ Correlation analysis
/ Delayed
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health services
/ Interviews
/ Low income groups
/ Medicaid
/ Medical technology
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Patients
/ Pharmacy
/ Polls & surveys
/ Poverty
/ Public health
/ Public transportation
/ Regression analysis
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Health
/ Sociodemographics
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Socioeconomic status
/ Transportation
/ Transportation services
/ Trends
/ Urban areas
2020
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Transportation Barriers to Health Care in the United States: Findings From the National Health Interview Survey, 1997–2017
by
Holmes, G. Mark
, McDonald, Noreen C.
, Wolfe, Mary K.
in
Access to Care
/ Adults
/ AJPH Surveillance
/ Americans with Disabilities Act 1990-US
/ Baby boomers
/ Barriers
/ Chronic conditions
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Community Health
/ Correlation analysis
/ Delayed
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health services
/ Interviews
/ Low income groups
/ Medicaid
/ Medical technology
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Patients
/ Pharmacy
/ Polls & surveys
/ Poverty
/ Public health
/ Public transportation
/ Regression analysis
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Health
/ Sociodemographics
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Socioeconomic status
/ Transportation
/ Transportation services
/ Trends
/ Urban areas
2020
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Transportation Barriers to Health Care in the United States: Findings From the National Health Interview Survey, 1997–2017
by
Holmes, G. Mark
, McDonald, Noreen C.
, Wolfe, Mary K.
in
Access to Care
/ Adults
/ AJPH Surveillance
/ Americans with Disabilities Act 1990-US
/ Baby boomers
/ Barriers
/ Chronic conditions
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Community Health
/ Correlation analysis
/ Delayed
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health services
/ Interviews
/ Low income groups
/ Medicaid
/ Medical technology
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Patients
/ Pharmacy
/ Polls & surveys
/ Poverty
/ Public health
/ Public transportation
/ Regression analysis
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Health
/ Sociodemographics
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Socioeconomic status
/ Transportation
/ Transportation services
/ Trends
/ Urban areas
2020
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Transportation Barriers to Health Care in the United States: Findings From the National Health Interview Survey, 1997–2017
Journal Article
Transportation Barriers to Health Care in the United States: Findings From the National Health Interview Survey, 1997–2017
2020
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Overview
Objectives. To quantify the number of people in the US who delay medical care annually because of lack of available transportation and to examine the differential prevalence of this barrier for adults across sociodemographic characteristics and patient populations. Methods. We used data from the National Health Interview Survey (1997–2017) to examine this barrier over time and across groups. We used joinpoint regression analysis to identify significant changes in trends and multivariate analysis to examine correlates of this barrier for the year 2017. Results. In 2017, 5.8 million persons in the United States (1.8%) delayed medical care because they did not have transportation. The proportion reporting transportation barriers increased between 2003 and 2009 with no significant trends before or after this window within our study period. We found that Hispanic people, those living below the poverty threshold, Medicaid recipients, and people with a functional limitation had greater odds of reporting a transportation barrier after we controlled for other sociodemographic and health characteristics. Conclusions. Transportation barriers to health care have a disproportionate impact on individuals who are poor and who have chronic conditions. Our study documents a significant problem in access to health care during a time of rapidly changing transportation technology.
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