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2014 | 33 | 3 |

Tytuł artykułu

Health care accessibility modeling: effects of change in spatial representation of demand for primary health care services

Warianty tytułu

Języki publikacji

EN

Abstrakty

EN

Słowa kluczowe

Wydawca

-

Rocznik

Tom

33

Numer

3

Opis fizyczny

p.39-53,fig.,ref.

Twórcy

autor
  • Department of Geography, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA
  • Institute of Geoecology and Geoinformation, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, Poland
autor
  • Department of Geography, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA

Bibliografia

  • Association of American Medical Colleges, 2011. State Physician Workforce Data Book. On-line: www.aamc.org/workforce (accessed 1 May 2013).
  • Brabyn L., Skelly C., 2002. Modeling population access to New Zealand public hospitals. International Journal of Health Geographics 1: 1-9.
  • Burkey M.L., Bhadury J., Eiselt H.A., 2012. A location-based comparison of health care services in four U.S. states with efficiency and equity. Socio-Econnomic Planning Sciences 46(2): 157-163.
  • Center for Disease Control, 2008. National Health Statistics Reports 3: 1-40. On-line: www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhsr/nhsr003.pdf (accessed 1 May 2013).
  • Church R., ReVelle C., 1974. The maximal covering location problem. Papers of the Regional Science Association 32: 101-118. [CrossRef]
  • Church R.L., Murray A.T., 2009. Business site selection, location analysis, and GIS. John Wiley, Sons, Hoboken.
  • Cromley E.K., McLafferty S.L., 2002. GIS and public health. Guilford Press, New York, London.
  • Daskin M., Haghani A., Khanal M., Malandraki C., 1989. Aggregation effects in maximum covering models. Annals of Operations Research 18: 115-140.
  • Gerrard R., Church R., Stoms D., Davis F., 1997. Selecting conservation reserves using species-covering models: Adapting the ARC/INFO GIS. Transactions in GIS 2(1): 45-60.
  • Harper P.R., Shahani A.K., Gallagher A.K., Bowie C., 2005. Planning health services with explicit geographical considerations: a stochastic location-allocation approach. Omega 33(2): 141-152.
  • Kwan M.-P., Weber J., 2008. Scale and accessibility: Implications for the analysis of land use-travel interaction. Applied Geography 28: 110-123. [Web of Science] [CrossRef]
  • Laditka J.M., 2004. Physician supply, physician diversity, and outcomes of primary health care for older persons in the United States. Health, Place 10(3): 231-244. [PubMed] [CrossRef]
  • Langford M., Higgs G., 2006. Measuring potential access to primary healthcare services: The influence of alternative spatial representations of population. The Professional Geographer 58(3): 294-306. [CrossRef]
  • Lin G., Allan D.E., Penning M.J., 2002. Examining distance effects on hospitalizations using GIS: a study of three health regions in British Columbia, Canada. Environment and Planning A, 34(11): 2037-2053.
  • Lovett A., Haynes R., Sunnenberg G., Gale S., 2002. Car travel time and accessibility by bus to general practitioner services: A study using patient registers and GIS. Social Science and Medicine 55(1): 97-111. [CrossRef]
  • Martin D., Williams H.C., 1992. Market-area analysis and accessibility to primary health-care centers. Environment and Planning A, 24(7): 1009-1019.
  • Mitropoulos P., Mitropoulos I., Giannikos I., 2012. Combining DEA with location analysis for the effective consolidation in the health care. Computers, Operations Research. DOI: 10.1016/j.cor.2012.01.008. [Web of Science] [CrossRef]
  • Oppong J., Hodgson M., 1994. Spatial accessibility to health care facilities in Suhum District, Ghana. The Professional Geographer 46(2): 199-209. [CrossRef]
  • Parker E.B., Campbell J.L., 1998. Measuring access to primary medical care: some examples of the use of geographic information systems. Health, Place 4(2): 183-193. [CrossRef]
  • Rushton G., 1989. Applications of location models. Annals of Operations Research 18: 25-42. [CrossRef]
  • U.S. Census Bureau, 2010. State, County QuickFacts. On-line: quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/16000.html (accessed 1 May 2013).
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1993. Primary Medical Care Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) Designation Criteria. On-line: bhpr.hrsa.gov/shortage/ hpsas/designationcriteria/primarycarehpsacriteria. html (accessed 1 May 2013).
  • Verter V., Lapierre S., 2002. Location of preventive Health Care Facilities. Annals of Operations Research 110: 123-132. [CrossRef] [Web of Science]
  • Wang F., Luo W., 2005. Assessing spatial and nonspatial factors for healthcare access: toward an integrated approach to defining health professional shortage areas. Health, Place 11: 131-146. [CrossRef]
  • Wang L., 2011. Analysing spatial accessibility to healthcare: a case study of access by different immigrant groups to primary care physicians in Toronto. Annals of GIS 17(4): 237-251.
  • Wang L., Roisman D., 2011. Modeling spatial accessibility of immigrants to culturally diverse family physicians. The Professional Geographer 63(1): 73-91. [CrossRef] [Web of Science]

Typ dokumentu

Bibliografia

Identyfikatory

Identyfikator YADDA

bwmeta1.element.agro-e887eb5a-57cf-414b-867c-f71a59382bf7
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