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Rural residents were almost 20 percent more likely to have heart valve replacements, and about 15 percent more likely to get knee or hip replacements or spine fusion surgery. Smaller but still noteworthy differences were found for prostate surgery, appendectomies, surgery to remove neck artery blockages, and surgery to fix broken hips.
An Archives critique says the study raises hard questions.
"We have been led to believe that patients in rural areas lack appropriate access to surgery. Although this may be true for specific areas, it does not seem to be true for the nation as a whole," Massachusetts General Hospital surgeon Dr. George Velmahos wrote.
Dr. Sam Finlayson, a Dartmouth Medical School surgeon and researcher, called the results provocative but said, "I don't think this study can negate all of the evidence that there are pockets of problems with access to surgical care across rural America."
Other research has suggested there's a growing shortage of surgeons in rural America. But Keith Mueller, a rural health expert at the University of Iowa, said the new study raises the "so what?" question if people lacking local access can get surgery elsewhere. Even so, he said, it still may be more appropriate to have more of those services locally.
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