Health Policy Manag.  2017 Sep;27(3):229-240. 10.4332/KJHPA.2017.27.3.229.

The Spatial Accessibility of Women in Childbearing Age for Delivery Services in Gangwon-do

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Health Administration, Yonsei University Graduate School, Wonju, Korea.
  • 2Department of Health Administration, Yonsei University College of Health Sciences, Wonju, Korea. planters@yonsei.ac.kr

Abstract

BACKGROUND
This study purposed to analyze the spatial accessibility of women in childbearing age to the healthcare organizations (HCOs) providing delivery services in Gangwon-do.
METHODS
Network analysis was applied to assess the spatial accessibility based on the travel time and road travel distance. Travel time and travel distance were measured between the location of HCOs and the centroid of the smallest administrative areas, eup, myeon, and dong in Gangwon-do. Korean Transport Database Center provided road network GIS (Geographic Information System) Database in 2015 and it was used to build the network dataset. Two types of network analysis, service area analysis and origin-destination (OD)-cost matrix analysis, applied to the created network dataset. Service area analysis defined all-accessible areas that are within a specified time, and OD-cost matrix analysis measured the least-cost paths from the HCOs to the centroids. The visualization of the number of the HCOs and the number of women in childbearing age on the Ganwon-do map and network analysis were performed with ArcGIS ver. 10.0 (ESRI, Redlands, CA, USA).
RESULTS
Twenty HCOs were providing delivery services in Gangwon-do in 2016. Over 50% of the women in childbearing age were aged more than 35 years. Service area analysis found that 89.56% of Gangwon-do area took less than 60 minutes to reach any types of HCOs. For tertiary hospitals, about 74.37% of Gangwon-do area took more than 60 minutes. Except Wonju-si and Hoengseonggun, other regions took more than 60 minutes to reach the tertiary hospital. Especially, Goseong-gun, Donghae-si, Samcheok-si, Sokcho-si, Yanggu-gun, Cheorwon-gun, and Taebaek-si took more than 100 minutes to the tertiary hospital.
CONCLUSION
This study provided that the accessibility toward the tertiary hospital was limited and it may cause problems in high-risk delivery patients such as over 35 years. Health policy makers will need to handle the obstetric accessibility issues in Gangwon-do.

Keyword

Spatial accessibility; Delivery services; Network analysis; Service area analysis; Origin-destination-cost matrix (OD-cost matrix)

MeSH Terms

Dataset
Delivery of Health Care
Female
Gangwon-do*
Health Policy
Humans
Statistics as Topic
Tertiary Care Centers
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