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Rural–Urban Health Care Cost Differences Among Latinx Adults With and Without Dementia in the United States

Journal of Aging and Health, Ahead of Print.
ObjectivesTo compare rural–urban health care costs among Latinx adults ages 51+ and examine variations by dementia status.MethodsData are from the Health and Retirement Study (2006–2018 waves; n = 15,567). We inflation-adjusted all health care costs using the 2021 consumer price index. Geographic context and dementia status were the main exposure variables. We applied multivariate two-part generalized linear models and adjusted for sociodemographic and health characteristics.ResultsRural residents had higher total health care costs, regardless of dementia status. Total health care costs were $850 higher in rural ($2,640) compared to urban ($1,789) areas (p < .001). Out-of-pocket costs were $870 higher in rural ($2,677) compared to urban ($1,806) areas (p < .001). Dementia status was not an effect modifier.DiscussionHealth care costs are disproportionately higher among Latinx rural, relative to urban, residents. Addressing health care costs among Latinx rural residents is a public health priority.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 12/01/2023 | Link to this post on IFP |
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