Summary: The aim was to examine differences in health care access at
the intersections of urbanicity and sexual identity in California. Authors
used the 2014-2017 Adult California Health Interview Survey paired with the
sexual orientation special use research file to create dummy groups
representing each dimension of urbanicity and sexual identity to compare access
to health care outcomes.
Findings: Relative to urban
heterosexual people, urban gay/lesbian people had 1.651 odds of using the
emergency room (ER). Urban bisexual people had 1.429 odds of being uninsured,
1.575 odds of delaying prescriptions, and 1.907 odds of using the ER. Rural
bisexual people experienced similar access barriers having 1.904 odds of
uninsurance and 2.571 odds of using the ER.
The study’s findings demonstrated disparate
access to health care across sexual orientation and rurality. The findings are
consistent with literature that suggests urban and rural sexual minority people
experience health care differently and demonstrate that bisexual people
experience health care differently than gay/lesbian people. These findings warrant
further study to examine how social identities, such as race/ethnicity,
interact with sexual orientation to determine health care access. Furthermore,
these findings demonstrate the need to emphasize the health care access needs
of sexual minority people in both rural and urban areas to eliminate health
care access disparities.