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Journal Article

Citation

Daly MR, Mellor JM, Millones M. Health Serv. Res. 2018; 53(Suppl 1): 3245-3264.

Affiliation

Department of Geography, University of Mary Washington, Fredericksburg, VA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/1475-6773.12736

PMID

28660679

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association between older adults' potentially avoidable hospitalization rates and both a geographic measure of primary care physician (PCP) access and a standard bounded-area measure of PCP access. DATA SOURCES: State physician licensure data from the Virginia Board of Medicine. Patient-level hospital discharge data from Virginia Health Information. Area-level data from the American Community Survey and the Area Health Resources Files. Virginia Information Technologies Agency road network data. US Census Bureau TIGER/Line boundary files. STUDY DESIGN: We use enhanced two-step floating catchment area methods to calculate geographic PCP accessibility for each ZIP Code Tabulation Area in Virginia. We use spatial regression techniques to model potentially avoidable hospitalization rates. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION: Geographic accessibility was calculated using ArcGIS. Physician locations were geocoded using TAMU GeoServices and ArcGIS. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Increased geographic access to PCPs is associated with lower rates of potentially avoidable hospitalization among older adults. This association is robust, allowing for spatial spillovers in spatial lag models.

CONCLUSIONS: Compared to bounded-area density measures, unbounded geographic accessibility measures provide more robust evidence that avoidable hospitalization rates are lower in areas with more PCPs per person.

RESULTS from our spatial lag models reveal the presence of positive spatial spillovers.

© Health Research and Educational Trust.


Language: en

Keywords

Geographic accessibility; potentially avoidable hospitalization; primary care provider; spatial analysis

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