Abstract

The potential for a population at a given location to utilize a health service can be estimated using a newly developed measure called the supply-concentric demand accumulation (SCDA) spatial availability index. Spatial availability is the amount of demand at the given location that can be satisfied by the supply of services at a facility, after discounting the intervening demand among other populations that are located nearer to a facility location than the given population location. This differs from spatial accessibility measures which treat absolute distance or travel time as the factor that impedes utilization. The SCDA is illustrated using pulmonary rehabilitation (PR), which is a treatment for people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The spatial availability of PR was estimated for each Census block group in Georgia using the 1105 residents who utilized one of 45 PR facilities located in or around Georgia. Data was provided by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. The geographic patterns of the SCDA spatial availability index and the two-step floating catchment area (2SFCA) spatial accessibility index were compared with the observed PR utilization rate using bivariate local indicators of spatial association. The SCDA index was more associated with PR utilization (Morans I = 0.607, P < 0.001) than was the 2SFCA (Morans I = 0.321, P < 0.001). These results suggest that the measures of spatial availability may be a better way to estimate the health care utilization potential than measures of spatial accessibility.

Highlights

  • The potential for a population at a given location to utilize a health service can be estimated as the spatial availability of a service

  • Medicare Fee-for-Service Medicare (FFS) beneficiaries aged ≥ 65 years who resided in Georgia received a total of 18,166 pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) treatments at the 33 PR facilities practicing in Georgia or at one of the 12 PR facilities located outside the state

  • We found that that the spatial availability of pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) in Georgia was significantly associated with the spatial accessibility of PR, but the spatial accessibility index appears to overestimate PR utilization potential

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Summary

Introduction

The potential for a population at a given location to utilize a health service can be estimated as the spatial availability of a service. While we used PR to illustrate the SCDA spatial availability index, this method could be used to estimate the utilization potential of any specific procedure in a healthcare utilization database that contains locational information about each health care facility and the number of services they provide.

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