The effect of distance from home on attendance at a small rural health centre in Papua New Guinea

被引:107
作者
Müller, I
Smith, T
Mellor, S
Rare, L
Genton, B
机构
[1] Swiss Trop Inst, Dept Publ Hlth & Epidemiol, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland
[2] Papua New Guinea Inst Med Res, Madang, Papua N Guinea
关键词
health seeking; utilization; distance effects; malaria; acute respiratory infection; Papua New Guinea;
D O I
10.1093/ije/27.5.878
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Backgound The willingness of patients in the rural tropics to seek medical fare at primary health care facilities is influenced by the distance they have to travel, but few studies have tried to estimate these distance effects. Methods Distance decay effects in attendance rates were estimated from a database of 4348 attendances at a rural health centre in Papua New Guinea, linked to demographic and house position data for the catchment population. Small-scale spatial patterns and differences between diagnoses, age groups and gender are described. Results Attendance decreased markedly with distance both overall (50% decrease at 3.5 km) and for patients with malaria or acute respiratory infections. This decrease was non-linear (on log scale) with distance. Although constant over time, there were big differences in this distance effect among age and gender groups: Female patients showed less distance decay in adolescents and adults, bur higher in the infant group. Spatial patterns accounted for 32% of the variation in age- and gender-specific attendance rates. Of the spatial effects more than 50% were due to distance effects. Conclusions Distance effects were similar in magnitude to those reported elsewhere, suggesting that distance effects may be generalizable to many parts of the rural tropics. The non-linearity of distance decay implies that a bell-shaped demand function should be used in health planning.
引用
收藏
页码:878 / 884
页数:7
相关论文
共 32 条
[11]   THE EPIDEMIOLOGY OF MALARIA IN THE WOSERA AREA, EAST SEPIK PROVINCE, PAPUA-NEW-GUINEA, IN PREPARATION FOR VACCINE TRIALS .1. MALARIOMETRIC INDEXES AND IMMUNITY [J].
GENTON, B ;
ALYAMAN, F ;
BECK, HP ;
HII, J ;
MELLOR, S ;
NARARA, A ;
GIBSON, N ;
SMITH, T ;
ALPERS, MP .
ANNALS OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND PARASITOLOGY, 1995, 89 (04) :359-376
[12]   GROWTH IN CHILDREN FROM THE WOSERA SUBDISTRICT, PAPUA-NEW-GUINEA, IN RELATION TO ENERGY AND PROTEIN INTAKES AND ZINC STATUS [J].
GIBSON, RS ;
HEYWOOD, A ;
YAMAN, C ;
SOHLSTROM, A ;
THOMPSON, LU ;
HEYWOOD, P .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION, 1991, 53 (03) :782-789
[13]  
GIRT J, 1973, CAN GEOGR, V17, P154
[14]  
GODELMANN L, 1995, THESIS U BASEL
[15]   THE DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH-SERVICES UTILIZATION IN SOUTHERN IRAQ - A HOUSEHOLD INTERVIEW SURVEY [J].
HABIB, OS ;
VAUGHAN, JP .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1986, 15 (03) :395-403
[16]  
HAINING R, 1990, SPATIAL DATA ANAL SO
[17]   Spatial and temporal variation in abundance of Anopheles (Diptera: Culicidae) in a malaria endemic area in Papua New Guinea [J].
Hii, JLK ;
Smith, T ;
Mai, A ;
Mellor, S ;
Lewis, D ;
Alexander, N ;
Alpers, MP .
JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1997, 34 (02) :193-205
[19]  
JOLLY R, 1966, MED CARE DEV COUNTRI
[20]  
Joseph A.E., 1984, ACCESSIBILITY UTILIZ