Distance, rurality and the need for care: access to health services in South West England
Distance, rurality and the need for care: access to health services in South West England
BACKGROUND: This paper explores the geographical accessibility of health services in urban and rural areas of the South West of England, comparing two measures of geographical access and characterising the areas most remote from hospitals. Straight-line distance and drive-time to the nearest general practice (GP) and acute hospital (DGH) were calculated for postcodes and aggregated to 1991 Census wards. The correlation between the two measures was used to identify wards where straight-line distance was not an accurate predictor of drive-time. Wards over 25 km from a DGH were classified as 'remote', and characterised in terms of rurality, deprivation, age structure and health status of the population.
RESULTS: The access measures were highly correlated (r2>0.93). The greatest differences were found in coastal and rural wards of the far South West. Median straight-line distance to GPs was 1 km (IQR = 0.6-2 km) and to DGHs, 12 km (IQR = 5-19 km). Deprivation and rates of premature limiting long term illness were raised in areas most distant from hospitals, but there was no evidence of higher premature mortality rates. Half of the wards remote from a DGH were not classed as rural by the Office for National Statistics. Almost a quarter of households in the wards furthest from hospitals had no car, and the proportion of households with access to two or more cars fell in the most remote areas.
CONCLUSION: Drive-time is a more accurate measure of access for peripheral and rural areas. Geographical access to health services, especially GPs, is good, but remoteness affects both rural and urban areas: studies concentrating purely on rural areas may underestimate geographical barriers to accessing health care. A sizeable minority of households still had no car in 1991, and few had more than one car, particularly in areas very close to and very distant from hospitals. Better measures of geographical access, which integrate public and private transport availability with distance and travel time, are required if an accurate reflection of the experience those without their own transport is to be obtained
Jordan, Hannah
d2e216d1-e08b-4d34-8cc8-5fe39e5624e0
Roderick, Paul
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Martin, David
f6fac203-8442-4058-9e75-dd239cc23f8d
Barnett, Sarah
0236060e-8f9f-4558-aa4b-a4508f2692a4
29 September 2004
Jordan, Hannah
d2e216d1-e08b-4d34-8cc8-5fe39e5624e0
Roderick, Paul
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Martin, David
f6fac203-8442-4058-9e75-dd239cc23f8d
Barnett, Sarah
0236060e-8f9f-4558-aa4b-a4508f2692a4
Jordan, Hannah, Roderick, Paul, Martin, David and Barnett, Sarah
(2004)
Distance, rurality and the need for care: access to health services in South West England.
International Journal of Health Geographics, 3 (21).
(doi:10.1186/1476-072X-3-21).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This paper explores the geographical accessibility of health services in urban and rural areas of the South West of England, comparing two measures of geographical access and characterising the areas most remote from hospitals. Straight-line distance and drive-time to the nearest general practice (GP) and acute hospital (DGH) were calculated for postcodes and aggregated to 1991 Census wards. The correlation between the two measures was used to identify wards where straight-line distance was not an accurate predictor of drive-time. Wards over 25 km from a DGH were classified as 'remote', and characterised in terms of rurality, deprivation, age structure and health status of the population.
RESULTS: The access measures were highly correlated (r2>0.93). The greatest differences were found in coastal and rural wards of the far South West. Median straight-line distance to GPs was 1 km (IQR = 0.6-2 km) and to DGHs, 12 km (IQR = 5-19 km). Deprivation and rates of premature limiting long term illness were raised in areas most distant from hospitals, but there was no evidence of higher premature mortality rates. Half of the wards remote from a DGH were not classed as rural by the Office for National Statistics. Almost a quarter of households in the wards furthest from hospitals had no car, and the proportion of households with access to two or more cars fell in the most remote areas.
CONCLUSION: Drive-time is a more accurate measure of access for peripheral and rural areas. Geographical access to health services, especially GPs, is good, but remoteness affects both rural and urban areas: studies concentrating purely on rural areas may underestimate geographical barriers to accessing health care. A sizeable minority of households still had no car in 1991, and few had more than one car, particularly in areas very close to and very distant from hospitals. Better measures of geographical access, which integrate public and private transport availability with distance and travel time, are required if an accurate reflection of the experience those without their own transport is to be obtained
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Published date: 29 September 2004
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Published online - no page numbers
Organisations:
Community Clinical Sciences, PHEW – P (Population Health)
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 15446
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/15446
ISSN: 1476-072X
PURE UUID: 9bb63500-0446-4f92-a94c-521624638593
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Date deposited: 18 Apr 2005
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:48
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Author:
Hannah Jordan
Author:
David Martin
Author:
Sarah Barnett
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