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Published in: Obesity Surgery 10/2010

01-10-2010 | Clinical Research

Racial, Socioeconomic, and Rural–Urban Disparities in Obesity-Related Bariatric Surgery

Authors: Amy E. Wallace, Yinong Young-Xu, David Hartley, William B. Weeks

Published in: Obesity Surgery | Issue 10/2010

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Abstract

Background

Morbid obesity is associated with serious health and social consequences, high medical costs and is increasing in the USA, particularly among rural, socioeconomically disadvantaged populations. Bariatric surgery more often provides significant long-term weight loss than traditional weight loss treatments. We examined the likelihood of bariatric surgery among morbidly obese patients across rural/urban locales, racial/ethnic groups, insurance categories, socioeconomic, and comorbidity levels.

Methods

We examined 159,116 records representing 774,000 patients with morbid obesity from the 2006 Nationwide Inpatient Sample. We determined the likelihood, expressed in odds ratios, of bariatric surgery associated with each patient characteristic using survey-weighted univariate logistic regression. We also performed multivariate logistic regression, assuming all patient factors were independent.

Results

After adjusting for patient-level characteristics, the most rural residents were 23% less likely to receive bariatric surgery than urban residents. Other demographic features associated with significantly lower odds ratios for bariatric surgery included minority status, male gender, lower income, older age, non-private insurance status, and higher comorbidity. Rural-dwelling patients who are non-white, male, poorer, older, sicker, and non-privately insured almost never received bariatric surgery (OR = 0.0089).

Conclusions

Though obesity is more prevalent among middle-aged, rural, economically disadvantaged, and racial/ethnic minority populations, these patients are unlikely to access bariatric surgery. Because obesity is a leading cause of preventable morbidity and mortality in the USA, effective treatments should be made available to all patients who might benefit. Current Medicare/Medicaid policies that reimburse only high volume centers may effectively deny rural residents who rely on these insurance programs for bariatric surgery.
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Metadata
Title
Racial, Socioeconomic, and Rural–Urban Disparities in Obesity-Related Bariatric Surgery
Authors
Amy E. Wallace
Yinong Young-Xu
David Hartley
William B. Weeks
Publication date
01-10-2010
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Obesity Surgery / Issue 10/2010
Print ISSN: 0960-8923
Electronic ISSN: 1708-0428
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11695-009-0054-x

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