Authors
Catherine K Liu, Kathryn Achuck, Lucy V Cobbs, Bita Momenaei, Louis Z Cai, Sidra Zafar, Rebecca R Soares, Yoshihiro Yonekawa
Published in
Ophthalmic surgery, lasers & imaging retina. Pages 1-7. Jun 01, 2026. Epub Jun 01, 2026.
Abstract
With rising incidence of pediatric retina disease, this study aimed to identify geographic and socioeconomic factors that predict residential access to pediatric retinal specialists.
This cross-sectional, retrospective study identified pediatric retina specialists in the United States and de-identified census tract-level data from public datasets. An origin-destination cost matrix was used to calculate travel time to the closest pediatric vitreoretinal specialist.
Factors associated with greater travel burden to the nearest pediatric retinal specialist included residing in census tracts that were rural (P < .001), in the South vs Northeast (P = .009), low income (P < .0001), and low education (associate and some college vs bachelor's degree; P = .003 and .015). Counties with higher proportion of very low birth weight infants had significantly less travel time (P < .001).
Counties with higher incidences of very low birth weight infants experience reduced travel durations to pediatric retina specialists. However, residents in rural, low-income, low-education census tracts, particularly in Southern regions, face greater travel burdens.
PMID:
42341262
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 25 Jun 2026.
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