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In Black Neighborhoods, Primary Care May Be Harder To Find

National Cancer Institute

 

new study finds a link between the racial makeup of Philadelphia neighborhoods and the number of primary care doctors who work there.

The study, conducted by researchers at the Christiana Care Health System, the University of Pennsylvania, Boston University, and the French Institute for Agricultural Research, measures primary care doctors per resident in Philadelphia's census tracts.

The researchers found that neighborhoods in Philadelphia with a high proportion of black residents are 28 times more likely to meet the definition of a "low-access area." That's an area that falls at the bottom of the rankings, having the fewest primary care doctors per resident.

The study adjusts for poverty rates and levels of insurance within neighborhoods.

Having fewer primary care doctors near your home could make it harder to get medical care, said Dr. Elizabeth Brown, study co-author and physician at the Christiana Care Health System.

"If there aren't sufficient primary care doctors in your area, it may mean that some patients have to travel a little bit farther, those physicians may have longer wait times to get appointments, those kinds of things," Brown said.

The study's results might be worth considering when deciding where to build new clinics, Brown added. 

Find more of this reporton the site of our partner, Keystone Crossroads

Marielle Segarra was WHYY's Keystone Crossroads reporter. She reported for the multi-station partnership on urban policy, crumbling infrastructure and how distressed Pennsylvania cities are bouncing back. As a freelance radio reporter, her stories have also aired on Latino USA, WNYC, WBUR and other NPR member stations.