Centre for Online Health, School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2013 May 2;13:163. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-163.
Specialist health services are often organised on a regionalised basis whereby clinical resources and expertise are concentrated in areas of high population. Through a high volume caseload, regionalised facilities may provide improved clinical outcomes for patients. In some cases, regionalisation may be the only economically viable way to organise specialist care. While regionalisation may have benefits, it may also disadvantage some population groups, particularly in circumstances where distance and time are impediments to access.Queensland is a large Australian state with a distributed population. Providing equitable access to specialist healthcare services to the population is challenging. Specialist care for critically ill or injured children is provided by the Queensland Paediatric Intensive Care Service which comprises two tertiary paediatric intensive care units. The two units are located 6 km (3.7 miles) apart by road in the state capital of Brisbane and provide state-wide telephone advice and specialist retrieval services. Services also extend into the northern area of the adjacent state of New South Wales. In some cases children may be managed locally in adult intensive care units in regional hospitals.The aim of this study is to describe the effect of geography and service organisation for children who need intensive care services but who present outside of metropolitan centres in Queensland.
METHODS/DESIGN: Using health services and population data, the availability and spatial accessibility to paediatric intensive care services will be analysed. Retrieval utilisation and the associated costs to the health service will be analysed to provide an indication of service utilisation by non-metropolitan patients.
While the regionalisation or centralisation of specialist services is recognised as an economical way to provide specialist health services, the extent to which these models serve critically ill children who live some distance from tertiary care has not been described. This study will provide new information on the effect of the regionalisation of specialist healthcare for critically ill children in Queensland and will have relevance to other regionalised health services. This study, which is focussed on describing the organisation, supply and demands on the health service, will provide the foundation for future work to explore clinical outcomes for non-metropolitan children who require intensive care.
专科卫生服务通常按区域化组织,临床资源和专业知识集中在人口密集地区。通过大量的病例量,区域化设施可为患者提供更好的临床结果。在某些情况下,区域化可能是组织专科护理的唯一可行的经济方式。虽然区域化可能有好处,但它也可能对某些人群群体不利,特别是在距离和时间是获得服务的障碍的情况下。
昆士兰州是澳大利亚的一个大州,人口分布广泛。为该州的人口提供公平获得专科医疗服务的机会具有挑战性。危重病或受伤儿童的专科护理由昆士兰儿科重症监护服务提供,该服务由两个三级儿科重症监护病房组成。这两个单位通过公路相隔 6 公里(3.7 英里),位于该州首府布里斯班,提供全州范围的电话咨询和专科检索服务。该服务还延伸到毗邻的新南威尔士州北部地区。在某些情况下,儿童可能在区域医院的成人重症监护病房中得到管理。
本研究的目的是描述需要重症监护服务但在昆士兰州大都市中心以外的地理位置和服务组织对儿童的影响。
方法/设计:使用卫生服务和人口数据,将分析儿科重症监护服务的可用性和空间可达性。将分析检索利用率和对卫生服务的相关成本,以提供非大都市患者服务利用情况的指示。
虽然专科服务的区域化或集中化被认为是提供专科医疗服务的经济方式,但这些模式对距离三级护理较远的危重病儿童的服务程度尚未描述。本研究将提供有关昆士兰州危重病儿童专科医疗区域化的新信息,对其他区域化卫生服务具有相关性。本研究侧重于描述组织、供应和对卫生服务的需求,将为未来探索需要重症监护的非大都市儿童的临床结果的工作提供基础。