Research Alert: June 23, 2020
The Supply and Rural-Urban Distribution of the Obstetrical Care Workforce in the U.S.
Monitoring the rural and urban supply and distribution of clinicians who provide obstetrical (OB) services is important for identifying areas that may lack access to OB care and identifying solutions. This brief describes the supply and geographic distribution of four types of OB care clinicians – obstetricians, advanced practice midwives, midwives (not advanced practice), and family physicians – using data from the 2019 National Plan and Provider Enumeration System and the American Board of Family Medicine. We provide estimates of each clinician type per 100,000 women of child-bearing age (15 through 49 years), describing supply and distribution for rural versus urban counties and among rural counties, micropolitan versus non-core counties. Our findings reveal that significant disparities exist between rural and urban areas in the supply of clinicians who provide OB services.
For more information, view the state-by-state reports.
Contact Information:
Davis Patterson, PhD
WWAMI Rural Health Research Center
Phone: 206.543.1892
davisp@uw.edu
Additional Resources of Interest:
- More information about the WWAMI Rural Health Research Center
- More information from the Rural Health Information Hub's topic guides: Healthcare Access, Healthcare Workforce