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8.8% of Pediatricians Practice in Rural Areas

General pediatricians are less likely than other primary care physicians to practice in rural areas, according to a report from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

In 2010, 8.8% of the 45,000 practicing general pediatricians worked in rural areas, compared with 22.5% of family physicians/general practitioners, 10.2% of general internists, and 11% of all physicians. For the United States as a whole, 20% of the population worked in rural areas and 80% worked in urban areas in 2010, the AHRQ noted.

Note: Based on data from the National Provider Identifier file, November 2010. Population in large rural areas = 10,000-50,000; population in small rural areas = 2,500-9,999; population in remote rural/frontier areas is less than 2,500.

Source: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

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General pediatricians are less likely than other primary care physicians to practice in rural areas, according to a report from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

In 2010, 8.8% of the 45,000 practicing general pediatricians worked in rural areas, compared with 22.5% of family physicians/general practitioners, 10.2% of general internists, and 11% of all physicians. For the United States as a whole, 20% of the population worked in rural areas and 80% worked in urban areas in 2010, the AHRQ noted.

Note: Based on data from the National Provider Identifier file, November 2010. Population in large rural areas = 10,000-50,000; population in small rural areas = 2,500-9,999; population in remote rural/frontier areas is less than 2,500.

Source: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

General pediatricians are less likely than other primary care physicians to practice in rural areas, according to a report from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

In 2010, 8.8% of the 45,000 practicing general pediatricians worked in rural areas, compared with 22.5% of family physicians/general practitioners, 10.2% of general internists, and 11% of all physicians. For the United States as a whole, 20% of the population worked in rural areas and 80% worked in urban areas in 2010, the AHRQ noted.

Note: Based on data from the National Provider Identifier file, November 2010. Population in large rural areas = 10,000-50,000; population in small rural areas = 2,500-9,999; population in remote rural/frontier areas is less than 2,500.

Source: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

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8.8% of Pediatricians Practice in Rural Areas
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8.8% of Pediatricians Practice in Rural Areas
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general pediatricians, primary care physicians, rural areas doctors, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
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