Receipt of preventive counseling among reproductive-aged women in rural and urban communities

被引:0
|
作者
McCall-Hosenfeld, J. S. [1 ]
Weisman, C. S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, Coll Med, Hershey, PA USA
来源
RURAL AND REMOTE HEALTH | 2011年 / 11卷 / 01期
关键词
counseling; educational status; health services accessibility; healthcare disparities; preventive health services; USA; women; PRIMARY-CARE; HEALTH-CARE; UNITED-STATES; SERVICES; RESIDENTS; ENROLLEES; WEIGHT; HEIGHT; AREAS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Introduction: Preventive health interventions often occur less frequently among rural women compared to urban women. Preventive counseling is an important feature of comprehensive preventive healthcare provision, but geographic disparities in the receipt of preventive counseling services have not been fully described. In this study the framework of the behavioral model of healthcare utilization was employed to investigate the association between rurality and receiving preventive counseling. It was hypothesized that demographic differences in rural and urban communities, as well as differential healthcare resources, explain rural-urban healthcare disparities in preventive counseling. Methods: Data were collected by telephone survey during 2004-2005 for 2002 participants aged 18-45 years in the Central Pennsylvania Women's Health Study. Measures of preventive counseling were based on US Preventive Services Task Force recommendations as of 2004. Multivariable models assessed the independent contribution of rurality to the receipt of counseling for smoking, alcohol/drug use, birth control, nutrition, weight management, and physical activity. Rurality was assessed using Rural-Urban Communting Area Codes. All models controlled for variables that predispose individuals to use health services (age, race/ethnicity, educational level), variables that enable or impede healthcare access (having a usual healthcare provider, using an obstetrician-gynecologist, poverty, and continuous health insurance coverage) and need-based variables (health behaviors and indicators). Results: In bivariate analysis, the rural population was older, had lower educational attainment, and was more likely to be White, non-Hispanic. Urban women tended to report seeing an obstetrician-gynecologist more frequently, and engaged more frequently in binge drinking/drug use. Preventive counseling was low among both rural and urban women, and ranged from 12% of the population for alcohol/drug use counseling, to 37% for diet or nutrition counseling. The degree of rurality appeared to impact counseling, with women in small or isolated rural areas significantly less likely than urban women and women in large rural areas to receive counseling related to smoking, alcohol/drug use and birth control. Overall, rural women reported less counseling for alcohol/drug use, smoking, birth control, nutrition and physical activity. In multivariable analysis, rurality was independently associated with lack of preventive counseling for physical activity. However, adjusting for predisposing, enabling and need-based variables fully attenuated the effect of rurality in the remaining models. Younger age, higher educational attainment, and seeing any obstetrician-gynecologist were associated with receipt of counseling in several models. Conclusions: Most women do not receive recommended preventive counseling. While rural women are less likely than urban women to receive counseling, rurality generally was not independently associated with receipt of counseling once demographics, access to health care, and health behaviors and indicators were controlled. This suggests that both demographic differences between rural and urban communities as well as aspects of healthcare access govern rural-urban healthcare disparities in preventive counseling. These results speak to important targets for reducting urban-rural healthcare disparities in receiving preventive counseling, improving the health literacy of the rural population, educating rural healthcare providers about the need for preventive counseling, and the expansion of access to obstetrician-gynecologists in rural communities.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Self-Perception of Weight and Its Association With Weight-Related Behaviors in Young, Reproductive-Aged Women
    Rahman, Mahbubur
    Berenson, Abbey B.
    OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2010, 116 (06) : 1274 - 1280
  • [42] Correlates of Unmet Need for Modern Contraception Among Reproductive-Aged Women Involved in New York City Criminal Legal Systems
    Slavin, Melissa N.
    West, Brooke S.
    Schreiber-Gregory, Deanna
    Levin, Frances R.
    Wingood, Gina
    Martino, Steve
    Wernette, Golfo Tzilos
    Black, Chermaine
    El-Bassel, Nabila
    WOMENS HEALTH REPORTS, 2024, 5 (01): : 132 - 142
  • [43] Receipt of Recommended Radiation Therapy Among Rural and Urban Cancer Patients
    Baldwin, Laura-Mae
    Patel, Shilpen
    Andrilla, C. Holly A.
    Rosenblatt, Roger A.
    Doescher, Mark P.
    CANCER, 2012, 118 (20) : 5100 - 5109
  • [44] Association between serum uric acid/high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio and hypertension among reproductive-aged women
    Xiaoxue Han
    Xuan Tan
    Mengyuan Liu
    Yiling Wei
    Andong He
    Ying Pan
    Di Qiu
    Ruiman Li
    Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition, 42
  • [45] Factors associated with never-use of long-acting reversible contraception among adult reproductive-aged women in Ohio
    Chakraborty, Payal
    Chettri, Shibani
    Gallo, Maria F.
    Smith, Mikaela H.
    Hood, Robert B.
    Bessett, Danielle
    Casterline, John B.
    Norris, Alison H.
    Turner, Abigail Norris
    PERSPECTIVES ON SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, 2023, 55 (01) : 38 - 48
  • [46] Association between serum uric acid/high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio and hypertension among reproductive-aged women
    Han, Xiaoxue
    Tan, Xuan
    Liu, Mengyuan
    Wei, Yiling
    He, Andong
    Pan, Ying
    Qiu, Di
    Li, Ruiman
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH POPULATION AND NUTRITION, 2023, 42 (01)
  • [47] Trends in Office-Based Care for Reproductive-Aged Women According to Physician Specialty: A Ten-Year Study
    Petterson, Stephen M.
    Bazemore, Andrew W.
    Phillips, Robert L.
    Rayburn, William F.
    JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH, 2014, 23 (12) : 1021 - 1026
  • [48] Rural-urban differences in breast and colorectal cancer screening among US women, 2014-2019
    Theodoropoulos, Nicholas
    Xie, Hui
    Wang, Qian
    Wen, Chi
    Li, Yannan
    RURAL AND REMOTE HEALTH, 2022, 22 (03): : 7339
  • [49] Barriers to and facilitators of hormonal and long-acting reversible contraception access and use in the US among reproductive-aged women who use opioids: A scoping review
    Charron, Elizabeth
    Kent-Marvick, Jacqueline
    Gibson, Tyler
    Taylor, Eliza
    Bouwman, Kelsey
    Sani, Gelina M.
    Simonsen, Sara E.
    Stone, Rebecca H.
    Kaiser, Jennifer E.
    McFarland, Mary M.
    PREVENTIVE MEDICINE REPORTS, 2023, 32
  • [50] Abortion beyond a medical issue; women's perception on the current Ethiopian abortion law among reproductive-aged women by 2023, a community-based cross-sectional study
    Erega, Besfat Berihun
    Molla, Addisu
    Dejen, Hiwot
    Ferede, Wassie Yazie
    HEALTH SCIENCE REPORTS, 2024, 7 (08)