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Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring potential spatial access to primary health care physicians using a modified gravity model

TLDR
A modified version of the gravity model is developed and used to calculate potential spatial access to PHC physicians in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, contributing more broadly to assessing the success of policy mandates to enhance the equitability of PHC provisioning in Canadian provinces.
Abstract
Ensuring equity of access to primary health care (PHC) across Canada is a continuing challenge, especially in rural and remote regions. Despite considerable attention recently by the World Health Organization, Health Canada and other health policy bodies, there has been no nation-wide study of potential (versus realized) spatial access to PHC. This knowledge gap is partly attributable to the difficulty of conducting the analysis required to accurately measure and represent spatial access to PHC. The traditional epidemiological method uses a simple ratio of PHC physicians to the denominator population to measure geographical access. We argue, however, that this measure fails to capture relative access. For instance, a person who lives 90 minutes from the nearest PHC physician is unlikely to be as well cared for as the individual who lives more proximate and potentially has a range of choice with respect to PHC providers. In this article, we discuss spatial analytical techniques to measure potential spatial access. We consider the relative merits of kernel density estimation and a gravity model. Ultimately, a modified version of the gravity model is developed for this article and used to calculate potential spatial access to PHC physicians in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia. This model incorporates a distance decay function that better represents relative spatial access to PHC. The results of the modified gravity model demonstrate greater nuance with respect to potential access scores. While variability in access to PHC physicians across the test province of Nova Scotia is evident, the gravity model better accounts for real access by assuming that people can travel across artificial census boundaries. We argue that this is an important innovation in measuring potential spatial access to PHC physicians in Canada. It contributes more broadly to assessing the success of policy mandates to enhance the equitability of PHC provisioning in Canadian provinces.

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Primary health care

Journal ArticleDOI

Accessibility, equity and health care: review and research directions for transport geographers

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the latest methodological and empirical research developments and trends in this area through a transport geography lens and identify knowledge gaps that transport researchers can help to fill, pertain to the need for more spatially disaggregated, individualized and temporally-aware accessibility metrics, more sophisticated geocomputational tools to operationalize such metrics and improved measurement of equity considerations in empirical research.
Journal ArticleDOI

A three-step floating catchment area method for analyzing spatial access to health services

TL;DR: A case study of spatial access to primary care physicians along the Austin–San Antonio corridor area in central Texas showed that the proposed three-step floating catchment area method effectively minimizes the overestimation of healthcare demand and reflects a more balanced geographic pattern of spatialAccess than E2SFCA.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial accessibility of primary health care utilising the two step floating catchment area method: an assessment of recent improvements

TL;DR: The first comparison between continuous and zonal (step) decay functions and specifically their effect within both rural and metropolitan populations is presented, demonstrating the necessary combination of both a distance-decay function and variable catchment size function in order to appropriately measure healthcare access across all geographical regions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variable catchment sizes for the two-step floating catchment area (2SFCA) method.

TL;DR: A new method to dynamically determine physician and population catchment sizes by incrementally increasing the catchment until a base population and a physician-to-population ratio are met is proposed.
References
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BookDOI

Density estimation for statistics and data analysis

TL;DR: The Kernel Method for Multivariate Data: Three Important Methods and Density Estimation in Action.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accessibility evaluation of land-use and transport strategies: review and research directions

TL;DR: A review of accessibility measures for assessing the usability of these measures in evaluations of land-use and transport strategies and developments is presented in this paper, using a broad range of relevant criteria, including theoretical basis, interpretability and communicability, and data requirements of the measures.
Journal Article

A framework for the study of access to medical care.

TL;DR: Indicators are suggested for the measurement of the various relevant aspects of access, with the system and population descriptors seen as process indicators and utilization and satisfaction as outcome indicators in a theoretical model of the access concept.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring accessibility: an exploration of issues and alternatives

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a framework for the development of accessibility measures and two case studies suggestive of the range of possible approaches are presented, as well as issues that planners must address in developing an accessibility measure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial accessibility of primary care: concepts, methods and challenges

TL;DR: Basic concepts and measurements of access are explained, some historical background is provided, the major questions concerning geographic accessibility of primary care are outlined, recent developments in GIS and spatial analysis are described, and examples of promising work are presented.
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