Table 1.
Variable | Frequency (%) |
---|---|
Geographic Unit | |
County | 59 (57%) |
Zip Code | 36 (35%) |
Population Density | 4 (4%) |
Other | 4 (4%) |
Definition Used to Determine Rurality | |
Rural–Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) Codes | 30 (29%) |
Metropolitan Statistical Areas | 16 (15%) |
Rural–Urban Continuum Codes (RUCC) | 12 (12%) |
Urban Influence Codes | 11 (11%) |
County Designation (state or federal) | 11 (11%) |
Core Based Statistical Areas | 6 (6%) |
National Center for Health Statistics approach | 6 (6%) |
Othera | 11 (11%) |
Population Studied | |
Rural and Urban | 83 (81%) |
Rural Only | 20 (19%) |
Number of Rural Categories used by authors | |
1 | 66 (64%) |
2 | 20 (19%) |
3 or more | 17 (17%) |
Data Type | |
Primary | 10 (10%) |
Secondary | 93 (90%) |
Primary HSR Focus | |
Access | 57 (55%) |
Quality | 23 (22%) |
Cost | 16 (16%) |
Othera | 7 (7%) |
Studies Found Difference in Outcomes Between Urban and Rural Populations (yes) | 68 (92%) |
Year | |
2010 – 2013 | 17 (17%) |
2014—2017 | 35 (34%) |
2018—2020 | 44 (46%) |
Journal | |
Journal of Rural Health | 44 (43%) |
Health Affairs | 21 (20%) |
Medical Care | 12 (11%) |
Health Services Research | 10 (10%) |
American Journal of Public Health | 9 (9%) |
Medical Care Research and Review | 5 (5%) |
Journal of Healthcare Management | 2 (2%) |
aOther includes the Veterans Administration classification, Federal Office of Rural Health Policy’s classification, geocoding and Zip Code tabulation areas [29]