Patient Care Access News

1 in 5 Adults Derailed Care Access Amid Transportation Barriers

Boosting public transit investment and offering Medicaid-supported nonemergency medical transportation can kickstart care access stalled by transportation barriers, RWJF researchers said.

Source: Getty Images

By Sarai Rodriguez

- Over 20 percent of US adults, mainly low-income individuals, experience transportation barriers that hinder care access, leading to at least one missed medical appointment in the past year, revealed an Urban Institute and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation study.

When it comes to healthcare access barriers, transportation takes the driver's seat as a key social determinant of health. Without adequate transportation, issues such as hunger, loneliness, and unemployment can accelerate at a faster pace.

Since the COVID-19 pandemic, the boom of telehealth helped steer care access around transportation barriers for some individuals, as per the Urban Institute researchers. Although telehealth has successfully reduced transportation obstacles for certain types of healthcare, such as mental health and primary care services, it can't replace in-person care for all health needs.