Author: Kaufman, Brystana G.; Whitaker, Rebecca; Pink, George; Holmes, G. Mark
Title: Half of Rural Residents at High Risk of Serious Illness Due to COVIDâ€19, Creating Stress on Rural Hospitals Cord-id: b80ig6kg Document date: 2020_6_30
ID: b80ig6kg
Snippet: PURPOSE: During the COVIDâ€19 epidemic, it is critical to understand how the need for hospital care in rural areas aligns with the capacity across states. METHODS: We analyzed data from the 2018 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System to estimate the number of adults who have an elevated risk of serious illness if they are infected with coronavirus in metropolitan, micropolitan, and rural areas for each state. Study data included 430,949 survey responses representing over 255.2 million nonin
Document: PURPOSE: During the COVIDâ€19 epidemic, it is critical to understand how the need for hospital care in rural areas aligns with the capacity across states. METHODS: We analyzed data from the 2018 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System to estimate the number of adults who have an elevated risk of serious illness if they are infected with coronavirus in metropolitan, micropolitan, and rural areas for each state. Study data included 430,949 survey responses representing over 255.2 million noninstitutionalized US adults. For data on hospital beds, aggregate survey data were linked to data from the 2017 Area Health Resource Files by state and metropolitan status. FINDINGS: About 50% of rural residents are at high risk for hospitalization and serious illness if they are infected with COVIDâ€19, compared to 46.9% and 40.0% in micropolitan and metropolitan areas, respectively. In 19 states, more than 50% of rural populations are at high risk for serious illness if infected. Rural residents will generate an estimated 10% more hospitalizations for COVIDâ€19 per capita than urban residents given equal infection rates. CONCLUSION: More than half of rural residents are at increased risk of hospitalization and death if infected with COVIDâ€19. Experts expect COVIDâ€19 burden to outpace hospital capacity across the country, and rural areas are no exception. Policy makers need to consider supply chain modifications, regulatory changes, and financial assistance policies to assist rural communities in caring for people affected by COVIDâ€19.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- access hospitals and acute illness: 1
- access hospitals and acute inpatient: 1
- actual rate and acute care: 1
- actual rate and acute illness: 1
- actual rate and low estimate: 1, 2
- acute care and additional cost: 1, 2, 3, 4
- acute care and low density: 1, 2
- acute illness and additional cost: 1
- acute illness and low density: 1
- acute illness and low density population: 1
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date