(Press-News.org) Closing underperforming hospitals could worsen health inequality in rural areas, finds new study
Closing underperforming hospitals may do more harm than good, particularly in rural areas -regardless of their performance status, according to new research from the University of Surrey. The study shows that while the promise of improved care quality often justifies hospital closures, they risk exacerbating health inequalities, particularly for patients who already face longer travel distances for treatment.
The study, published in Regional Science and Urban Economics, which focused on elective hip replacement patients in England, found that the negative impact on patient welfare from hospital closures is significantly greater in rural areas. Patients who relied on the closed facilities could experience a utility loss equivalent to travelling an additional 10.25 kilometres for treatment.
The study highlights several alarming trends. While patients in urban areas typically travelled shorter distances to receive care because they could access a higher number of hospitals to get treatment, the average patient travelled 17.4km. As such, the researchers show that the average distance travelled would increase substantially if hospitals in rural areas were closed. This is particularly concerning given that rural patients often have fewer alternatives available to them. The research suggests that any closure in these regions is likely to widen the existing gap in healthcare access between urban and rural populations, resulting in greater health disparities.
Dr Giuseppe Moscelli, Associate Professor of Economics and co-author of the study at the University of Surrey, said:
"Our findings reveal a crucial, often overlooked consequence of hospital closures: the significant toll they take on rural patients who already have limited access to healthcare. While improving hospital quality is essential, it cannot come at the cost of accessibility for those who need it most."
The team analysed patients' choices of hospitals for elective hip surgery to simulate the effects of closing eight hospitals identified as the lowest quality. These hospitals were assessed based on health indicators such as emergency readmission rates and health gains measured by the Oxford Hip Score. By observing patient choices and calculating the resulting changes in travel distance, quality of care, and overall patient welfare, the researchers could estimate the potential fallout from these closures.
Researchers recommend a more nuanced approach to hospital management and closure policies. Rather than shutting down facilities based solely on performance metrics, regulators should consider the broader implications of such decisions on patient access and equity.
Dr Moscelli continued:
“This includes maintaining a network of hospitals in both urban and rural areas that meet quality standards while ensuring they remain accessible to the populations they serve.”
The Government’s decision to reintroduce league tables for NHS hospital providers in England makes considerations about the trade-offs between quality benchmarks and the accessibility of hospital care across differently served geographies even more salient.
[ENDS]
Note to editors:
Dr Giuseppe Moscelli is available for interview, please contact mediarelations@surrey.ac.uk to arrange END
Closing underperforming hospitals could worsen health inequality in rural areas, finds new study
2024-12-04
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New tool enhances control of cellular activity
2024-12-04
A basic function of cells is that they act in response to their environments. It makes sense, then, that a goal of scientists is to control that process, making cells respond how they want to what they want.
One avenue for this ambition is cell receptors, which function like ignition slots on a cell, requiring keys – such as specific hormones, drugs, or antigens – to start up specific cellular activities. There are already synthetic receptors that give us some control over this sequence of events, most famously the chimeric antigen receptors used in CAR-T cell cancer therapy. But existing synthetic receptors are limited in the variety of keys ...
Genetic data from ‘biobanks’ may help improve prediction of effectiveness, side effects of common medications, study finds
2024-12-04
A UCLA study has outlined a new framework that researchers say would improve predictive power of genetics to determine how well a patient would respond to commonly prescribed medications as well as the severity of any side effects.
Published in the journal Cell Genomics, the study found that data from large libraries of sequenced human genomes and other biological data, known as biobanks, can provide new insights into genetic architecture of response to widely prescribed drugs.
Study first author and UCLA Bioinformatics Ph.D. candidate Michal Sadowski said the most ...
Richard Baraniuk honored with 2025 IEEE Signal Processing Medal
2024-12-04
Richard G. Baraniuk, the C. Sidney Burrus Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rice University, has been awarded the 2025 IEEE Jack S. Kilby Signal Processing Medal. This honor recognizes Baraniuk’s exceptional achievements in signal processing, particularly his pioneering work in multiscale and sparse signal processing. Notably, Baraniuk’s professorship is named after his mentor, Charles Sidney Burrus, a former dean of engineering at Rice, who also won the Kilby Medal in 2009.
Baraniuk’s innovative contributions have advanced the theoretical and practical frontiers of signal processing and machine learning. His work has focused on low-dimensional models, ...
College students’ insomnia linked more strongly with loneliness than screen time
2024-12-04
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Being lonely is a bigger hurdle to a good night’s sleep for college students than too much time at a computer or other electronic screen, a new study by Oregon State University suggests.
The research led by scientists in the OSU College of Liberal Arts is important because both insomnia and loneliness are serious public health concerns and are at epidemic levels among young adults in higher education, the researchers note.
Jessee Dietch, John Sy and collaborators at Harvard Medical School and Chaminade University ...
Lifesaver for wild bees: The importance of quarries
2024-12-04
A research team at the University of Göttingen, Germany’s Nature And Biodiversity Conservation Union (NABU) in Rhede, and the Thünen Institute in Braunschweig has investigated the importance of limestone quarries for wild bee conservation. Diverse landscapes with good connectivity between quarries and calcareous grasslands proved to be particularly valuable. Calcareous grasslands – meaning grasslands on chalk or limestone soils – are exceptionally rich in plant and animal species, making them valuable ecosystems. Quarries ...
Research study shows the cost-effectiveness of AI-enhanced heart failure screening
2024-12-04
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Earlier research showed that primary care clinicians using AI-ECG tools identified more unknown cases of a weak heart pump, also called low ejection fraction, than without AI. New study findings published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Digital Health suggest that this type of screening is also cost-effective in the long term, especially in outpatient settings.
Incremental drops in heart function are treatable with medication but can be hard to spot. Patients may or may not have symptoms when their heart is not ...
After decades of plantation agriculture, coconut palms dominate over half of Pacific atoll forests
2024-12-04
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Coconut palms are king throughout the tropics, serving as the foundation for human lives and cultures across the Pacific Ocean for centuries. However, 200 years of planting by colonial interests transformed the palm from the revered “Tree of Life” to a cash crop monoculture grown on Pacific atolls for a singular purpose — production of coconut oil (copra) for export around the world.
Despite wide interest in the global footprint of palm crops, the distribution of coconut palms across tropical Pacific atolls has received little attention. Until now. Published in Environmental Research Letters, ...
MD Anderson Research Highlights: ASH 2024 Special Edition
2024-12-04
SAN DIEGO ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center’s Research Highlights showcases the latest breakthroughs in cancer care, research and prevention. These advances are made possible through seamless collaboration between MD Anderson’s world-leading clinicians and scientists, bringing discoveries from the lab to the clinic and back.
This special edition features upcoming oral presentations by MD Anderson researchers at the 66th American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting and Exposition, providing ...
Study shows significant rise in psychotherapy use among adults, but gains are uneven across socioeconomic groups
2024-12-04
Access to psychotherapy has risen substantially among U.S. adults with mild to moderate distress since 2018, according to a new study from Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health and the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. The increase in psychotherapy use is particularly notable among younger adults, women, college-educated individuals, and those with higher family incomes. Privately insured individuals also experienced greater gains in psychotherapy use compared to those who are publicly insured or uninsured. The findings are published ...
The bisexual population in Stockholm has doubled in a decade
2024-12-04
Over the past decade, the proportion of residents in Stockholm County who identify as bisexual has nearly doubled. The younger generations are driving the trend and many of them have previously identified as heterosexual. This is according to a study published in JAMA Network Open by researchers at Karolinska Institutet in collaboration with the Centre for Epidemiology and Community Medicine within Region Stockholm in Sweden.
The researchers analysed data from the Stockholm Public Health Cohort, covering more than 98,000 individuals from 2002 to 2021. The proportion of people ...