08/25/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 08/25/2024 12:25
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Link to video and sound (details below): https://go.hawaii.edu/aXN
Hawaiʻi residents living in rural areas face significantly more health challenges than those who live in urban areas, according to a first-of-its-kind report by the University of Hawaiʻi Economic Research Organization (UHERO). Released August 25, the report also found that the challenges are even greater for rural residents with disabilities and for those living in poverty.
The data was gathered in June 2023 through a survey of 1,571 residents, with more than 20% identifying as living in rural areas. The assessment used data from the UHERO Rapid Survey, a twice-yearly health survey of a general population cohort in Hawaiʻi that has been administered since 2022.
This is the first rural health report targeted specifically for Hawaiʻi that measures data at the individual level.
Compared with those living in urban areas, residents in rural areas reported that their overall health was lower and had more days per week where their activities were restricted by their physical or mental health.
The report was produced by UHERO and funded by UH's Rural Health Research and Policy Center (RHRPC) through a grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration.
Significant findings:
The report examines several definitions of rural areas. The results above are based on the report's primary definition of rural areas, which are all zip codes in the state except for East Oʻahu, Kāneʻohe in the east to Kapolei in the west, Līhuʻe on Kauaʻi, Kahului-Wailuku on Maui, and Hilo and Kailua-Kona on Hawaiʻi Island.
The UH researchers noted that the report's findings suggest that policy responses aimed at improving health outcomes and preventive healthcare utilization should include efforts to reduce disparities between rural and non-rural populations. The results also indicate that rural health policy should prioritize support for marginalized groups, especially individuals with disabilities and those with low incomes in rural regions.
"This report helps to tell the story of how health outcomes differ in rural areas compared to more urban areas, providing the evidence base for potential policy solutions to address these challenges," said Aimee Grace, Principal Investigator of the Rural Health Research and Policy Center and Director of the UH System Office of Strategic Health Initiatives.
UHERO is housed in UH Mānoa's College of Social Sciences and RHRPC is housed in the UH System Office of Strategic Health Initiatives.
Link to video and sound (details below): https://go.hawaii.edu/aXN
VIDEO:
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SOUNDBITES:
Aimee Grace, UH Office of Strategic Health Initiatives Director and UH Rural Health Research and Policy Center Principal Investigator (:10)
"We hope that this UHERO report in addition to other reports as well will help to improve our ability to create policy solutions and work together to enact systemic change."
Daniela Bond-Smith, UHERO Data Scientist/Research Economist and report author (:13)
"We also find that some population groups are particularly affected, people with disabilities and people with low incomes who live in rural areas face the largest health disparities."
Ruben Juarez, UHERO-HMSA Distinguished Professor of Health Economics, Professor of Economics, UHERO Research Fellow and report author (:20)
"We suggest a combined approach of place-based policies targeting rural areas such as increasing capacity for medical services in rural areas or providing tax incentives for doctors to work in rural communities, as well as demographic focus policies that address the needs of specific vulnerable groups."
Lisa Rantz, Hawai'i State Rural Health Association President (:18)
"We are thrilled with the report. It really highlights the unique challenges that we face in rural Hawai'i that our counterparts on the mainland simply don't. Rural areas on the mainland, they may have to travel great distances, but they can at least drive."