Abstract

BackgroundA primary task of the Norwegian helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) is to provide advanced medical care to the critical ill and injured outside of hospitals. Where HEMS bases are located, directly influences who in the population can be reached within a given response time threshold and who cannot. When studying the locations of bases, the focus is often on efficiency, that is, maximizing the total number of people that can be reached within a given set time. This approach is known to benefit people living in densely populated areas, such as cities, over people living in remote areas. The most efficient solution is thus typically not necessarily a fair one. This study aims to incorporate fairness in finding optimal air ambulance base locations.MethodsWe solve multiple advanced mathematical optimization models to determine optimal helicopter base locations, with different optimization criteria related to the level of aversion to inequality, including the utilitarian, Bernoulli-Nash and iso-elastic social welfare functions. This is the first study to use the latter social welfare function for HEMS.ResultsFocusing on efficiency, a utilitarian objective function focuses on covering the larger cities in Norway, leaving parts of Norway largely uncovered. Including fairness by rather using an iso-elastic social welfare function in the optimization avoids leaving whole areas uncovered and in particular increases service levels in the north of Norway.ConclusionsIncluding fairness in determining optimal HEMS base locations has great impact on population coverage, in particular when the number of base locations is not enough to give full coverage of the country. As results differ depending on the mathematical objective, the work shows the importance of not only looking for optimal solutions, but also raising the essential question of ‘optimal with respect to what’.

Highlights

  • A primary task of the Norwegian helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) is to provide advanced medical care to the critical ill and injured outside of hospitals

  • The aim of this paper is to present an alternative to the practice of optimizing base locations for efficiency only, and demonstrate how the concept of fairness can be included in the corresponding mathematical models

  • When maximizing fairness for Norwegian HEMS rather than efficiency we find that bases are more spread around the country, and avoid the typical clustering of bases around urban areas (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

A primary task of the Norwegian helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) is to provide advanced medical care to the critical ill and injured outside of hospitals. When studying the locations of bases, the focus is often on efficiency, that is, maximizing the total number of people that can be reached within a given set time. This approach is known to benefit people living in densely populated areas, such as cities, over people living in remote areas. How the target can be met using a minimal number of bases and vehicles, or how to maximize coverage with a given number of bases and vehicles This focus on efficient use of HEMS in Norway has been applied in several studies challenging the current locations of HEMS bases in Norway, either in greenfield scenarios or by making small adjustments to the current system [5, 8]. In a review of ambulance optimization methods all 17 methods mentioned optimized for efficiency [12]

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