Investigator

Jan M. Eberth

Professor and Department Head · Virginia Tech, Population Health Sciences

About

JMEJan M. Eberth
Papers(1)
Geographic disparitie…
Collaborators(2)
Peiyin HungWhitney E. Zahnd
Institutions(1)
University Of South C…

Papers

Geographic disparities in residential proximity to colorectal and cervical cancer care providers

BackgroundPersistent rural‐urban disparities for colorectal and cervical cancers raise concerns regarding access to treatment providers. To the authors knowledge, little is known regarding rural‐urban differences in residential proximity to cancer specialists.MethodsUsing the 2018 Physician Compare data concerning physician practice locations and the 2012 to 2016 American Community Survey, the current study estimated the driving distance from each residential zip code tabulation area (ZCTA) centroid to the nearest cancer provider of the following medical specialties involved in treating patients with colorectal and cervical cancer: medical oncology, radiation oncology, surgical oncology, general surgery, gynecological oncology, and colorectal surgery. Using population‐weighted multivariable logistic regression, the authors analyzed the associations between ZCTA‐level characteristics and driving distances >60 miles to each type of specialist. ZCTA‐level residential rurality was defined using rural‐urban commuting area codes.ResultsNearly 1 in 5 rural Americans lives >60 miles from a medical oncologist. Rural‐urban differences in travel distances to the nearest cancer care provider(s) increased substantially for cancer surgeons; greater than one‐half of rural residents were required to travel 60 miles to reach a gynecological oncologist, compared with 8 miles for their urban counterparts. Individuals residing within ZCTAs with a higher poverty rate, those of American Indian/Alaska Native ethnicity, and/or were located in the South and West regions were more likely than their counterparts to be >60 miles away from any of the aforementioned providers.ConclusionsThe substantial travel distances required for rural, low‐income residents to reach a cancer specialist should prompt a policy action to increase access to specialized cancer care for millions of rural residents.

189Works
1Papers
2Collaborators

Positions

2025–

Professor and Department Head

Virginia Tech · Population Health Sciences

2022–

Professor and Chair

Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health · Health Management and Policy

2018–

Associate Professor

University of South Carolina · Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics

2013–

Assistant Professor

University of South Carolina · Epidemiology & Biostatistics

Education

MSPH/Epidemiology

Texas A&M University Health Sciences Center

PhD/Epidemiology

University of Texas School of Public Health

BS/Public Health Sciences

Clemson University

Country

US

Links & IDs
0000-0001-9500-4212

Scopus: 15725615400

Researcher Id: A-1335-2014