Health Affairs March 1, 2024
Sara L. Schaefer, Shukri H. A. Dualeh, Nicholas Kunnath, John W. Scott, Andrew M. Ibrahim

Abstract

Primary care physicians are often the first to screen and identify patients with access-sensitive surgical conditions that should be treated electively. These conditions require surgery that is preferably planned (elective), but, when access is limited, treatment may be delayed and worsening symptoms lead to emergency surgery (for example, colectomy for cancer, abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, and incisional hernia repair). We evaluated the rates of elective versus emergency surgery for patients with three access-sensitive surgical conditions living in primary care Health Professional Shortage Areas during 2015–19. Medicare beneficiaries in more severe primary care shortage areas had higher rates of emergency...

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