Volume 47 | Number 6 | December 2012

Abstract List

Darrell J. Gaskin, Gniesha Y. Dinwiddie, Kitty S. Chan, Rachael R. McCleary


Objective

To examine the association between residential segregation and geographic access to primary care physicians () in metropolitan statistical areas ().


Data Sources

We combined zip code level data on primary care physicians from the 2006 American Medical Association master file with demographic, socioeconomic, and segregation measures from the 2000 U.S. Census. Our sample consisted of 15,465 zip codes located completely or partially in an .


Methods

We defined shortage areas as those zip codes with no PCP or a population to PCP ratio of >3,500. Using logistic regressions, we estimated the association between a zip code's odds of being a shortage area and its minority composition and degree of segregation in its .


Principal Findings

We found that odds of being a shortage area were 67 percent higher for majority African American zip codes but 27 percent lower for majority Hispanic zip codes. The association varied with the degree of segregation. As the degree of segregation increased, the odds of being a shortage area increased for majority African American zip codes; however, the converse was true for majority Hispanic and Asian zip codes.


Conclusions

Efforts to address shortages should target African American communities especially in segregated .