Newswise, November 16, 2015 - A new study of adults ages 85 or
older has found that rural residents have significantly higher levels of
chronic disease, take more medications, and die several years earlier than
their urban counterparts.
The findings were just published in The Journal of
Rural Health by researchers from Oregon State University and the
Oregon Health & Science University.
The research confirms some of the special challenges facing
older populations in rural or remote areas, who often have less access to
physicians, long distances to travel for care, sometimes a lower socioeconomic
and educational level, and other issues.
It also reflects health problems that
might have been reduced if they were treated earlier or more aggressively,
researchers say.
Data from several different study groups found that rural
residents measured significantly higher on the Modified Cumulative Illness
Rating Scale, with about an 18 percent higher disease burden.
"It's been known for some time that health care is harder
to access in rural areas, and this helps us better understand the extent of the
problem," said Leah Goeres, a postdoctoral scholar who led the research at
the Oregon State University/Oregon Health & Science University College of
Pharmacy.
"Many physicians do the best they can in rural areas
given the challenges they face," Goeres said.
"But there are fewer
physicians, fewer specialists, a higher caseload. Doctors have less support
staff and patients have less public transportation. A patient sometimes might
need to wait months to see a doctor, and have to drive significant distances.
Adverse effects can increase from taking multiple medications.
"These are real barriers to choice and access, and they
affect the quality of care that's available."
Also worth noting, Goeres said, is that especially in very old
populations, illness can lead to more illness and quickly spiral out of
control. A patient in an urban setting might receive prompt treatment for a
mild ulcer, whereas the same person in a rural setting might have to wait while
the condition worsens and may even lead to cancer.
"It's of particular concern that rural older adults start
with more disease burden, which significantly increased over the next five
years, but the average number of medications they used decreased over the same
time period," said David Lee, an assistant professor in the OSU College of
Pharmacy who oversaw the research.
"This may be due to difficulty accessing health care,
leading to more disease burden over time, yet less use of medications,"
Lee said. "The opposite trends are seen in urban older adults."
This research was done in Oregon with three cohorts of older
adults, one rural and two urban, and 296 people altogether. It was supported by
the Oregon Alzheimer's Disease Tax Checkoff Fund and the National Institutes of
Health.
The findings of the new study include:
- The
rural population of Oregon contains a greater proportion of older adults
than the urban population.
- The
use of many medications can be especially risky for people in their 80s
and 90s, leading to a concern called "polypharmacy" when a
person takes five or more medications.
- Rural
participants were found to use an average of 5.5 medications, compared to
3.7 for urban participants.
- At
baseline measurements, valuable medications to aid bone mineralization
were often used less in rural populations, but pain-killing opioids were
used more often.
- Medication
use for high blood pressure went up significantly over time for rural
populations, but not urban ones, in which their use had already been
higher.
- The
rate of disease accumulation was significant in the rural cohort, and
negligible in their urban counterparts.
- The
median survival time of the rural cohort was 3.5 years, compared to 7.1
years for the urban older adults.
- Risk
factors of chronic diseases were low education, poor socioeconomic status,
a history of chronic disease, being female, and older age. These factors
are associated with a typical rural population.
- Living
with someone, and/or having a large social network are protective factors
against chronic disease, and may be more common in an urban or suburban
population.
- Both
urban and rural residents used a large number of over-the-counter agents,
including vitamins, minerals and herbal supplements.
Increased access to health care, health education, increased
supervision from clinicians, and better management of both prescription and
over-the-counter medications could all be of value in helping rural residents
to live longer and healthier livers, the researchers said in their conclusion.
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