Health,personal mobility and the use of health services in rural Norfolk |
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Authors: | Graham Bentham Robin Haynes |
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Affiliation: | School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, U.K. |
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Abstract: | Trends towards the centralisation of both primary care and hospital services are increasing the distances that rural residents must travel to receive health care. Contradicting the widely held image of the healthiness of rural people, data from social surveys in Norfolk show that some of the remoter rural areas have populations with a relatively high need for health care. Furthermore, the groups with most need for health care (the old, the disabled, the poor, etc.) are also those with low levels of personal mobility, for whom travelling long distances to centralised health services is particularly difficult. After adjustments have been made for variations in need, it is shown that people in the remoter areas receive much less health care than comparable people in more accessible areas. However, branch surgeries do seem to make the general practitioner service more accessible, particularly to less mobile rural residents. |
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