
Aging Unequally: Health Disparities Among Older Adults in the District of Columbia
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By
Fanni Farago
AARP Research Published December 14, 2023Older adult residents of the District of Columbia (D.C.) living east and west of the Anacostia River face stark disparities in health status, health care access and quality, and health
infrastructure, according to the AARP District of Columbia Health Disparities Survey.
Key Findings
For example, residents east of the river are about twice as likely as older residents west of the river to report having fair or poor health and four times as likely to facebarriers to accessing health care services.Overall, 47% of D.C. residents 40-plus report living with heart disease (high cholesterol, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, heart
failure, etc.). However, residents east of the river are significantly more likely than those west of the river to report living with heart disease (56% vs. 43%), along with respiratory
conditions such as asthma and bronchitis (26% vs. 20%).
Methodology
This report is based on data from the 2023 AARP District of Columbia Health Disparities Survey, which was an online survey of 494 residents 40-plus in the District of Columbia. Almost a
third (31%) of the respondents were residents east of the Anacostia River (n=152), while the rest (69%) were residents west of the river (n=352). The survey was fielded October 19, 2022–May
30, 2023 on Dynata Insights Platform using a convenience sample. The sample was recruited by AARP D.C. State Office. The study’s small sample size does not guarantee that the results are
representative of U.S. adults or D.C. residents. The data are not weighted.
For more information, please contact Aisha Bonner Cozad, Senior Research Advisor, at [email protected] and Fanni Farago, PhD Research Intern, at [email protected]. For media inquiries, please
contact External Relations at [email protected].
Suggested Citation:
Farago, Fanni. 2023 AARP District of Columbia Health Disparities Survey. Washington, DC: AARP Research, December 2023. https://doi.org/10.26419/res.00769.001
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