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Out Of Reach: Inequities In The Use Of High-Quality Home Health Agencies

Shekinah Fashaw‐Walters, Momotazur Rahman, Gilbert C. Gee, Vincent Mor, Michael J. White, Kali S. Thomas

2022Health Affairs61 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Patients receiving home health services from high-quality home health agencies often experience fewer adverse outcomes (for example, hospitalizations) than patients receiving services from low-quality agencies. Using administrative data from 2016 and regression analysis, we examined individual- and neighborhood-level racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic factors associated with the use of high-quality home health agencies. We found that Black and Hispanic home health patients had a 2.2-percentage-point and a 2.5-percentage-point lower adjusted probability of high-quality agency use, respectively, compared with their White counterparts within the same neighborhoods. Low-income patients had a 1.2-percentage-point lower adjusted probability of high-quality agency use compared with their higher-income counterparts, whereas home health patients residing in neighborhoods with higher proportions of marginalized residents had a lower adjusted probability of high-quality agency use. Some 40-77 percent of the disparities in high-quality agency use were attributable to neighborhood-level factors. Ameliorating these inequities will require policies that dismantle structural and institutional barriers related to residential segregation.

Topics & Concepts

Agency (philosophy)Socioeconomic statusHome healthEthnic groupHealth equityQuality (philosophy)Environmental healthGerontologyMedicineDemographyBusinessHealth carePublic healthDemographic economicsEconomic growthPolitical scienceNursingPopulationSociologyEconomicsLawPhilosophyEpistemologySocial scienceGeriatric Care and Nursing HomesHealth disparities and outcomesHomelessness and Social Issues
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