Abstract

PurposeChildren should attend well child visits (WCVs) during early childhood so that developmental disorders may be identified as early as possible, so treatment can begin. The aim of this research was to determine if rurality impacts access to WCV during early childhood, and if altering rurality measurement methods impacts outcomes. Design and methodsWe utilized a longitudinal correlational design with early childhood data gathered from the Virginia All Payer Claims Database, which contains claims data from Medicaid and the majority of Virginia commercial insurance payers (n = 6349). WCV attendance was evaluated against three rurality metrics: a traditional metric using Rural-Urban Commuting Area codes, a developed land variable, and a distance to care variable, at a zip code level. ResultsTwo of the rurality methods revealed that rural children attend fewer WCVs than their urban counterparts, (67% vs. 50% respectively, using a traditional metric; and a 0.035 increase in WCV attendance for every percent increase in developed land). Differences were attenuated by insurance payer; children with Medicaid attend fewer WCVs than those with private insurance. ConclusionsYoung children in rural Virginia attend fewer WCVs than their non-rural counterparts, placing them at higher risk for missing timely developmental disorder screenings. The coronavirus disease pandemic has been associated with an abrupt and significant reduction in vaccination rates, which likely indicates fewer WCVs and concomitant developmental screenings. Pediatric nurses should encourage families of young children to develop a plan for continued WCVs, so that early identification of developmental disorders can be achieved.

Highlights

  • Well child visits (WCVs) during early childhood are an important component of pediatric preventive health care

  • Screening for developmental disorders is predominantly performed during early childhood, at the 18, 24- and 30-month visits, supplementing the continuation of immunizations and growth evaluations that were initiated during infancy (American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Practice and Ambulatory Medicine & American Academy of Peditrics; Bright Futures, 2017)

  • One in six young children living in a rural area has a mental, behavioral or developmental disorder diagnosis (Robinson et al, 2017), rural children with special healthcare needs are less likely than their urban counterparts to be seen by a pediatrician (Skinner & Slifkin, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

Well child visits (WCVs) during early childhood (ages 1- 4) are an important component of pediatric preventive health care. Missing WCVs during early childhood can further impact the ability for rural children with a developmental delay to receive appropriate care, because many rural areas already have limited access to diagnostic specialists such as developmental pediatricians (DeGuzman, Altrui, et al, 2017; Rosenberg et al, 2011). Several classification codes are available only at a county level, limiting the ability of researchers to understand the impact of more granular variations in factors that drive disparities such as distance to care, or landscape-related hazardous roads which can vary widely in large area rural counties (DeGuzman, Cohn, et al, 2017; Pesut et al, 2010). The aim of this research was to determine if rurality impacts early childhood WCV attendance in Virginia, and to determine what differential information may be gleaned by altering the way rurality is measured

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