Rural-urban differences in visits to primary care physicians
View abstract on PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.Rural primary care physicians see more acute injuries and pain conditions. Training should address these needs, alongside pediatric care, as preventive services are less frequent in rural settings.
Area Of Science
- Primary Care Medicine
- Rural Health
- Medical Education
Background
- Ambulatory practice patterns differ between rural and urban primary care physicians.
- Current medical education may not adequately prepare physicians for rural practice demands.
Purpose Of The Study
- To explore differences in ambulatory care practices between rural and urban primary care physicians.
- To identify specific training needs for physicians entering rural practice.
Main Methods
- Analysis of National Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys (1996-1997).
- Categorization of physicians as rural (outside metropolitan statistical area) or urban.
- Examination of visit diagnoses and services provided.
Main Results
- Family physicians manage most rural visits, including pediatric cases.
- Rural visits show higher rates of acute injuries (6.1% vs. 5.0%) and pain-related conditions (8.5% vs. 5.4%).
- Preventive counseling and pediatric anticipatory guidance are less common in rural settings.
Conclusions
- Physicians in rural practice require enhanced training in acute injury and chronic pain management.
- Further research is needed to understand reduced preventive service delivery in rural areas.
- Subtle differences in care provision highlight specific training gaps for rural-bound physicians.

