Cinnamon Jonathan, Schuurman Nadine, Crooks Valorie A
Department of Geography, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, V5A 1S6, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2008 Jun 30;8:140. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-140.
Providing palliative care is a growing priority for health service administrators worldwide as the populations of many nations continue to age rapidly. In many countries, palliative care services are presently inadequate and this problem will be exacerbated in the coming years. The provision of palliative care, moreover, has been piecemeal in many jurisdictions and there is little distinction made at present between levels of service provision. There is a pressing need to determine which populations do not enjoy access to specialized palliative care services in particular.
Catchments around existing specialized palliative care services in the Canadian province of British Columbia were calculated based on real road travel time. Census block face population counts were linked to postal codes associated with road segments in order to determine the percentage of the total population more than one hour road travel time from specialized palliative care.
Whilst 81% of the province's population resides within one hour from at least one specialized palliative care service, spatial access varies greatly by regional health authority. Based on the definition of specialized palliative care adopted for the study, the Northern Health Authority has, for instance, just two such service locations, and well over half of its population do not have reasonable spatial access to such care.
Strategic location analysis methods must be developed and used to accurately locate future palliative services in order to provide spatial access to the greatest number of people, and to ensure that limited health resources are allocated wisely. Improved spatial access has the potential to reduce travel-times for patients, for palliative care workers making home visits, and for travelling practitioners. These methods are particularly useful for health service planners - and provide a means to rationalize their decision-making. Moreover, they are extendable to a number of health service allocation problems.
随着许多国家的人口持续快速老龄化,提供姑息治疗已成为全球卫生服务管理者日益重视的优先事项。在许多国家,目前姑息治疗服务不足,而且这一问题在未来几年将更加严重。此外,在许多司法管辖区,姑息治疗的提供是零散的,目前在服务提供水平上几乎没有区别。尤其迫切需要确定哪些人群无法获得专门的姑息治疗服务。
根据实际道路行驶时间计算加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省现有专门姑息治疗服务机构周边的服务范围。将人口普查街区的人口统计数据与道路路段相关的邮政编码相联系,以确定距离专门姑息治疗机构道路行驶时间超过一小时的人口占总人口的百分比。
该省81%的人口居住在距离至少一家专门姑息治疗服务机构一小时路程之内,但不同地区卫生当局的空间可达性差异很大。例如,根据该研究采用的专门姑息治疗的定义,北部卫生当局只有两个这样的服务地点,其超过半数的人口无法合理地获得此类护理的空间可达性。
必须开发并使用战略位置分析方法来准确确定未来姑息治疗服务的位置,以便为最多的人提供空间可达性,并确保有限的卫生资源得到合理分配。改善空间可达性有可能减少患者、进行家访的姑息治疗工作者以及出诊医生的出行时间。这些方法对卫生服务规划者特别有用——并提供了一种使其决策合理化的手段。此外,它们可扩展到许多卫生服务分配问题。