Using GIS and perceived distance to understand the unequal geographies of healthcare in lower-income urban neighborhoods
Publication date
2012
Authors
Hawthorne, T.
Kwan, M.P.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
Geographers play important roles in public health research, particularly in understanding healthcare
accessibility, utilisation, and individual healthcare experiences. Most accessibility studies have
benefited from the increased sophistication of geographic information systems (GIS). Some studies
have been enhanced with semi-structured in-depth interviews to understand individual experiences
of people as they access healthcare. However, few accessibility studies have explicitly utilised
individual in-depth interview data in the construction of new GIS accessibility measures. Using
mixed methods including GIS analysis and individual data from semi-structured in-depth interviews,
we offer satisfaction-adjusted distance as a new way of conceptualising accessibility in GIS.
Based on fieldwork in a predominantly lower-income community in Columbus, Ohio (USA), we
find many residents felt neighbourhood healthcare facilities offered low-quality care, which suggested
an added perceived distance as they attempt to access high-quality healthcare facilities. The
satisfaction-adjusted distance measure accounts for the perceived distance some residents feel as
they search for high-quality healthcare in lower-income urban neighbourhoods. In moving beyond
conventional GIS and re-conceptualising accessibility in this way, we offer a more realistic portrayal
of the issues lower-income urban residents face as they attempt to access high-quality healthcare
facilities. The work has theoretical implications for conceptualising healthcare accessibility,
advances the mixed-methodologies literature, and argues for a more equitable distribution of
high-quality healthcare in urban neighbourhoods.
Keywords
Ohio, healthcare accessibility, mixed-method, GIS, quality care, satisfaction
Citation
Wiley-Blackwell