A "treatment-control" research design incorporating a modified "tracer disease" methodology for measuring health outcomes has been applied to the evaluation of a rural pediatric outreach preventive health care program in Appalachia. The primary research objective was to assess the general level of effectiveness of the health services provided by the program in preventing and/or reducing illness due to common childhood diseases among children receiving these services, when compared to similar (i.e., "matched") children receiving standard pediatric outpatient care but without such outreach services.The research findings indicate that prevalence rates for the selected tracer diseases were generally
For 18 months between July 1973 and December 1974, the development of a primary care center for a rural Appalacian county engaged the efforts of local community leaders and the Department of Community Medicine of the University of Kentucky College of Medicine. This case study discusses some of the major events and factors contributing to this unsuccessful endeavor. The local cultural and sociomedical circumstances, including economic and political forces, and the errors in institutional relations and communication are analyzed. Many of the community problems encountered, at both the local and regional levels, are common to various rural areas. Considerations discussed in some detail include medical care payment mechanisms, rural economics, and local sociocultural systems. These community health problems, and the broader health policy issues that they represent, must be addressed before any significant changes or advances can be made in health care in rural America.
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