A new study has found that individual pharmacy choices in the United States are not only influenced by proximity but also by the socioeconomic character of the neighborhood where they are located.
Society for Risk AnalysisMay 19 2026 An estimated 15.8 million people in the United States live in pharmacy deserts. With limited access to healthcare services, like hospitals and pharmacies, these individuals are at risk of elevated mortality risk and higher rates of preventable disease progression.
A new study, published in Risk Analysis, has found that individual pharmacy choices are driven not only by proximity but by the sociodemographic character of the neighborhoods where they are located. Researchers from California Polytechnic State University conducted a case study combining mobility data from mobile phone usage and pharmacy foot traffic patterns with demographic and socioeconomic census data to examine healthcare access in Los Angeles County, California.
The authors applied discrete choice theory to model consumer preferences and analyze demand behaviors in a state where healthcare access remains an issue. This research also draws a sharp distinction in how we understand access to essential services from a data-driven perspective. Much of the existing literature has focused on potential access, describing the extent to which services are geographically proximate. In this research, we looked at people's realized access, showing their actual use of facilities.
" Daniel Hopkins, an industrial engineering student at Cal Poly The study found that only 70% of residents visited a pharmacy within 5km of their residence, despite nearly 98% having one that close . Additionally, over a third of low-income residents visited pharmacies in low-income areas while less than 7% traveled to wealthier neighborhoods for care, demonstrating that human mobility patterns exhibit strong social similarities.
"Geographic access is necessary but not sufficient," added Dr. Zhiyuan Wei, an assistant professor in the Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering. "People are not just going to the nearest pharmacy. They are going to places that feel socially familiar to them, and that has real consequences for how we plan and allocate healthcare services.
" Related StoriesThe findings carry particular urgency given the scale of the pharmacy access problem nationally. With millions of Americans living in pharmacy deserts, areas with restricted access to the pharmacies that provide essential medications, rapid diagnostics and basic health services. In California alone, nearly 2.5 million residents, or 6 percent of the population, live in pharmacy deserts, the highest total of any state. In LA County, roughly 25 percent of census tracts are classified as pharmacy deserts.
The researchers say their data-driven model can support decision-making beyond pharmacies, including grocery stores and other essential services, and could be especially valuable for understanding how access patterns shift during natural disasters and other hazard events, when mobility constraints intensify. Source:Society for Risk Analysis
Pharmacy Access Accessibility Accessibility California Los Angeles County Discrete Choice Theory Mobile Phone Usage Pharmacy Foot Traffic Patterns Sociodemographic Data Realized Access Data-Driven Perspective
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Saturday Night Live Shows Conservative Bias, Study FindsThe mockumentary news show Weekend Update on SNL, hosted by comedians Michael Che and Colin Jost, takes jabs at significant news stories of the week, with a majority of the jokes targeting conservatives.
Read more »
New study identifies dopamine's role in reversing Alzheimer'sImagine if patients with Alzheimer's could have their memories restored.
Read more »
Study finds pulmonary rehab empowers children with respiratory issuesNew research presented at the 2026 ATS International Conference shows that pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) significantly improves functioning and quality of life in children with chronic respiratory conditions, regardless of whether lung function itself improves.
Read more »
One in seven Brits swapped their GP for ChatGPT, study findsPatients are using chatbots for medical advice, while the NHS is still debating where AI belongs
Read more »
