Abstract

BackgroundPrecise quantification of health service utilisation is important for the estimation of disease burden and allocation of health resources. Current approaches to mapping health facility utilisation rely on spatial accessibility alone as the predictor. However, other spatially varying social, demographic and economic factors may affect the use of health services. The exclusion of these factors can lead to the inaccurate estimation of health facility utilisation. Here, we compare the accuracy of a univariate spatial model, developed only from estimated travel time, to a multivariate model that also includes relevant social, demographic and economic factors.MethodsA theoretical surface of travel time to the nearest public health facility was developed. These were assigned to each child reported to have had fever in the Kenya demographic and health survey of 2014 (KDHS 2014). The relationship of child treatment seeking for fever with travel time, household and individual factors from the KDHS2014 were determined using multilevel mixed modelling. Bayesian information criterion (BIC) and likelihood ratio test (LRT) tests were carried out to measure how selected factors improve parsimony and goodness of fit of the time model. Using the mixed model, a univariate spatial model of health facility utilisation was fitted using travel time as the predictor. The mixed model was also used to compute a multivariate spatial model of utilisation, using travel time and modelled surfaces of selected household and individual factors as predictors. The univariate and multivariate spatial models were then compared using the receiver operating area under the curve (AUC) and a percent correct prediction (PCP) test.ResultsThe best fitting multivariate model had travel time, household wealth index and number of children in household as the predictors. These factors reduced BIC of the time model from 4008 to 2959, a change which was confirmed by the LRT test. Although there was a high correlation of the two modelled probability surfaces (Adj R2 = 88%), the multivariate model had better AUC compared to the univariate model; 0.83 versus 0.73 and PCP 0.61 versus 0.45 values.ConclusionOur study shows that a model that uses travel time, as well as household and individual-level socio-demographic factors, results in a more accurate estimation of use of health facilities for the treatment of childhood fever, compared to one that relies on only travel time.

Highlights

  • Precise quantification of health service utilisation is important for the estimation of disease burden and allocation of health resources

  • Developing spatial models of utilisation has been the subject of much research, ranging from the use of Euclidean distances, to more sophisticated travel time models as proxies of utilisation [6]

  • Distance decay varied with number of children in a household, and they were generally similar at close proximity to public facilities, variation was visibly significant as travel time increased

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Summary

Introduction

Precise quantification of health service utilisation is important for the estimation of disease burden and allocation of health resources. Other spatially varying social, demographic and economic factors may affect the use of health services The exclusion of these factors can lead to the inaccurate estimation of health facility utilisation. Developing spatial models of utilisation has been the subject of much research, ranging from the use of Euclidean distances, to more sophisticated travel time models as proxies of utilisation [6]. Improvements to these models include the use of individual level attendance patterns, in conjunction with the accessibility surfaces to define utilisation at high spatial resolutions [1, 2, 7, 8]. Developing a greater understanding of the role of non-spatial factors that influence the treatment seeking behaviours of febrile individuals [11] become crucial in spatial modeling of utilisation

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