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Rural–Urban Analyses of Health-Related Quality of Life Among People With Multiple Sclerosis
Authors:Robert J Buchanan  PhD  ; Li Zhu  PhD  ; Randolph Schiffer  MD  ; Dagmar Radin  PhD  ; and Wesley James  MS
Institution:Department of Political Science and Public Administration, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Miss.;Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Rural Public Health, Texas A&M Health Sciences Center, College Station, Tex.;Department of Neuropsychiatry, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Lubbock, Tex.;Social Science Research Center, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Miss.
Abstract:ABSTRACT:  Context: Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) is a multi-dimensional construct including aspects of life quality or function that are affected by physical health and symptoms, psychosocial factors, and psychiatric conditions. HRQOL gives a broader measure of the burden of disease than physical impairment or disability levels. Purpose: To identify factors associated with HRQOL among people with multiple sclerosis (MS) utilizing the SF-8 Health Survey. Methods: Data presented in this study were collected in a survey of 1,518 people with MS living in all 50 states. The survey sample was randomly selected from the database of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, using ZIP codes to recruit the survey sample. A multiple linear regression model was employed to analyze the survey data, with the Physical Component Summary and the Mental Component Summary of the SF-8 the dependent variables. Independent variables were demographic characteristics, MS-disease characteristics, and health services utilized. Findings: People with MS in rural areas tended to report lower physically related HRQOL. Worsening MS symptoms were associated with reduced physical and mental dimensions of HRQOL. In addition, people with MS who received a diagnosis of depression tended to have reduced physical and mental dimensions of HRQOL. Receiving MS care at an MS clinic was associated with better physically related HRQOL, while having a neurologist as principal care physician was associated with better mental-related HRQOL. Conclusion: The challenge is to increase the access that people living with MS in rural areas have to MS-focused specialty care.
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