| Literature DB >> 30935065 |
Meihan Jin1,2,3, Lu Liu4,5, Yongxi Gong6,7, Yu Liu8.
Abstract
Public medical service facilities are among the most basic needs of the public and are directly related to residents' health. The balanced development of medical service facilities is of great significance. Public medical service facilities can be divided into different levels according to their medical equipment, service catchment, and medical quality, which is very important but has been ignored for a long time in accessibility evaluations. In this research, based on the hospital and population datasets of Shenzhen, we propose a hierarchical two-step floating catchment area (H2SFCA) method to evaluate the spatial accessibility of public medical resources considering the factors at different levels of medical resources. In the proposed method, the spatial accessibility of each level of public medical service facilities are evaluated using different distance attenuation functions according to the medical service's scope. In addition, a measurement is proposed to evaluate the equity of medical service facilities based on accessibility and population density distributions. To synthesize the general spatial accessibility and the distribution balance of public medical service facilities, we standardize the spatial accessibility of public medical service facilities at each level and then calculate the weighted sums of the accessibility of each level. The general spatial equity of public medical service facilities is also evaluated. The results show that the accessibility and distribution balance of medical resources performs dissimilarly at the three levels and can be discriminated within different regions of the city. The accessibility of citywide medical facilities in Shenzhen decreases from the city center to the suburban area in a radial pattern and the accessibility and distribution balance in the suburban areas needs improvement.Entities:
Keywords: distance attenuation; hierarchical two-step floating catchment area method; medical service facilities; spatial accessibility
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30935065 PMCID: PMC6479551 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16071150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Spatial distribution of hospitals in Shenzhen.
Figure 2Distribution of population density in Shenzhen.
Figure 3Schematic display of the attractive ranges for the three medical service levels in Shenzhen.
Figure 4Schematic plot of distance attenuation functions for the three medical service levels in Shenzhen: (a) municipal hospital accessibility distance attenuation; (b) town-level hospital accessibility distance attenuation; (c) community-level hospital accessibility distance attenuation.
Table for distance decay indicators for different hospital levels.
| Types of Medical Service Facilities | Transportation Mode | Truncation Distance | Attenuation Coefficient |
|---|---|---|---|
| Community-level hospitals | Walk | 1000 m | 2 |
| Town-level hospitals | Vehicle travel | 10,000 m | 1 |
| Municipal hospitals | Vehicle travel | Unlimited | 0.5 |
Figure 5Distribution balance measurement of medical service facility accessibility.
Figure 6Municipal hospital accessibility
Figure 7Town-level hospital accessibility
Figure 8Community-level hospital accessibility.
Figure 9General hospital accessibility.
Figure 10Balance evaluation between municipal hospital accessibility and population density.
Figure 11Balance evaluation between town-level hospital accessibility and population density.
Figure 12Balance evaluation between community-level hospital accessibility and population density.
Figure 13Balance evaluation between all medical service facility accessibility and population density levels.