期刊论文详细信息
International Journal of Health Geographics
Catchments of general practice in different countries– a literature review
Donald P Allan1 
[1] Discipline of Public Health, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing & Health Sciences, Flinders University, Health Sciences Building, Registry Road, Bedford Park, SA 5042, Australia
关键词: Patient registration catchments;    Primary health care;    Markets;    Spatial scale;    GIS;    Accessibility measures;    General practice catchment areas;   
Others  :  1141628
DOI  :  10.1186/1476-072X-13-32
 received in 2014-04-10, accepted in 2014-08-04,  发布年份 2014
PDF
【 摘 要 】

The purpose of this paper is to review the current research on catchment areas of private general practices in different developed countries because healthcare reform, including primary health care, has featured prominently as an important political issue in a number of developed countries. The debates around health reform have had a significant health geographic focus.

Conceptually, GP catchments describe the distribution, composition and profile of patients who access a general practitioner or a general practice (i.e. a site or facility comprising one or more general practitioners). Therefore, GP catchments provide important information into the geographic variation of access rates, utilisation of services and health outcomes by all of the population or different population groups in a defined area or aggregated area.

This review highlights a wide range of diversity in the literature as to how GP catchments can be described, the indicators and measures used to frame the scale of catchments. Patient access to general practice health care services should be considered from a range of locational concepts, and not necessarily constrained by their place of residence. An analysis of catchment patterns of general practitioners should be considered as dynamic and multi-perspective. Geographic information systems provide opportunities to contribute valuable methodologies to study these relationships. However, researchers acknowledge that a conceptual framework for the analysis of GP catchments requires access to real world data. Recent studies have shown promising developments in the use of real world data, especially from studies in the UK.

Understanding the catchment profiles of individual GP surgeries is important if governments are serious about patient choice being a key part of proposed primary health reforms. Future health planning should incorporate models of GP catchments as planning tools, at the micro level as well as the macro level, to assist policies on the allocation of resources so that opportunities for good health outcomes for all groups within society, especially those who have been systematically denied equitable access, are maximised.

【 授权许可】

   
2014 Allan; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20150327094445112.pdf 367KB PDF download
Figure 1. 56KB Image download
【 图 表 】

Figure 1.

【 参考文献 】
  • [1]Kaul A, Bhandari P, Walsh T: What does the Dartmouth Atlas have to say about the Politics of the ACA? Health Care Blog 2012., 1http:/thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2012/12/27 webcite
  • [2]Lewis DJ, Longley PA: Patterns of patient registration with primary health care in the UK National Health Service. Ann Assoc Am Geogr 2012, 102(5):1135-1136.
  • [3]Murphy B: Regarding “National Health and Hospital Reform Commission final report and patient centred suggestions for reform”. Aust J Prim Health 2012, 18:2-3.
  • [4]Wiese M, Jolley G, Baum F, Freeman T, Kidd M: Australia’s systems of primary healthcare: the need for improved coordination and implications for Medicare locals. Aust Fam Physician 2011, 40:995-999.
  • [5]Daley C, Gubb J: Healthcare Systems. Switzerland: CIVATAS; 2012. updated by Clarke E. (Dec 2011) , Bidgood E. (January 2013)
  • [6]Fiegel C: IOM: Target inefficient Medicare doctors, not regions. Am Med Assoc 2013., 1http://www.amednews.com/apps/%20pbcs.dll/personalia?id=cfiegel/ webcite
  • [7]Scandlen G: IOM Debunks Dartmouth. National Centre for Policy Analysis Health Policy Blog; NCPAorg 2013, 1-7.
  • [8]Fisher E, Skinner J: Making sense of geographic variations in health care: the new IOM report. Health Aff Blob 2013, 1-4. http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2013/07/24 webcite
  • [9]Lewis DJ, Longley PA: Patterns of patient registration with primary health care in the UK National Health Service. Ann Assoc Am Geogr 2012, 102(5):1135.
  • [10]Ansari Z: A review of literature on access to primary health care. Aust J Prim Health 2007, 13(2):93.
  • [11]Bourgueil Y, Marek A, Mousques J: Three models of primary care organisation in Europe, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Questions d’economie de la Sante 2009, 141:1.
  • [12]Bourgueil Y, Marek A, Mousques J: Three models of primary care organisation in Europe, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Questions d’economie de la Sante 2009, 141:1-4.
  • [13]Del Fante P, Allan D, Babidge E: The Practice Health Atlas and business modelling opportunities. Aust Fam Physician 2006, 35(1–2):34-38.
  • [14]De Maeseneer J, Willems S, De Sutter A, Van de Geuchte I, Billings M: Primary health care as a strategy for achieving equitable care: a literature review commissioned by the Health Systems Knowledge Network. Health Syst Knowledge Netw 2007, 2-4. http://www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en webcite
  • [15]De Maeseneer J, Willems S, De Sutter A, Van de Geuchte I, Billings M: Primary health care as a strategy for achieving equitable care: a literature review commissioned by the Health Systems Knowledge Network. Health Syst Knowledge Netw 2007, 3. http://www.who.int/social_determinants/finalreport/en webcite
  • [16]Crooks VA, Andrews GJ: Thinking Geographically About Primary Health Care, Chapter 1. In Primary Health Care: People, Practice Place. Ashgate; 2009:12-13.
  • [17]De Maeseneer J, Willems S, De Sutter A, Van de Geuchte I, Billings M: Primary health care as a strategy for achieving equitable care: a literature review commissioned by the Health Systems Knowledge Network. Health Syst Knowledge Netw 2007, 1:1-42. http://www.who.int/social_determinants/finalreport/en webcite
  • [18]Crooks VA, Andrews GJ: Thinking Geographically About Primary Health Care, Chapter 1. In Primary Health Care: People, Practice, Place. Ashgate; 2009:11-17.
  • [19]Schuurman N: The effects of Population Density, Physical Distance and Socio-Economic Vulnerability on Access to Primary Health Care in Rural and Remote British Columbia, Canada, Chapter 4. In Primary Health Care: People, Practice, Place. Ashgate; 2009:60.
  • [20]Crooks VA, Andrews GJ: Thinking Geographically About Primary Health Care, Chapter 1. In Primary Health Care: People, Practice, Place. Ashgate; 2009:14.
  • [21]Ansari Z: A review of literature on access to primary health care. Aust J Prim Health 2007, 13(2):80-95.
  • [22]Ansari Z: A review of literature on access to primary health care. Aust J Prim Health 2007, 13(2):83.
  • [23]Penchansky R, Thomas JW: The concept of access: definition and relationship to consumer satisfaction. Med Care 1982, 19(2):127-140.
  • [24]Donabedian A: Models for organizing the delivery of personal health services and criteria for developing them. Milbank Quarterly Fund Quarterly 1972, 50:103-154.
  • [25]Khan AA, Bhardwaj SM: Access to health care. A conceptual framework and its relevance to health care planning. Evaluation and the Health Professions 17(1):60-76.
  • [26]Wang F: Measurement, optimisation, and the impact of health care accessibility: a methodological review. Ann Assoc Am Geogr 2012, 102(5):1105.
  • [27]Howard P, Feyman Y: Rhetoric and reality - the obamacare evaluation project: access to care and the physician shortage. Med Prog Rep 2013, 15:2-7. Manhattan Institute for Policy Research
  • [28]Howard P, Feyman Y: Rhetoric and reality - the obamacare evaluation project: access to care and the physician shortage. Med Prog Rep 2013, 15:7. Manhattan Institute for Policy Research
  • [29]Higgs G: A literature review of the use of GIS – based measures of access to health care services. Health Serv Outcome Res Methodol 2004, 5:119-139.
  • [30]Guagliardo MF: Spatial accessibility of primary care: concepts, methods and challenges. Int J Health Geogr 2004, 3:3. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [31]Hugo G, Smailes P, MacGregor C, Fenton M, Brunckhorst D: Defining social catchments in non-metropolitan Australia. Bur Rural Sci 2001, 45:45-49. http://data.daff.gov.au/brsShop/data/12095_social_catch.pdf webcite
  • [32]Dennis C, Marsland D, Cockett T: Central place practice: shopping centre attractiveness measures, hinterland boundaries and the UK retail hierarchy. J Retail Consum Serv 2002, 9:185-199.
  • [33]Root ED: Moving neighbourhoods and health research forward: using geographic methods to examine the role of spatial scale in neighbourhood effects on health. Ann Assoc Am Geographers 2012, 102(5):986-995.
  • [34]Shortt N, Moore A, Coombes M: Defining regions for locality health care planning: a multidimensional approach. Soc Sci Med 2005, 60(12):2715-2727.
  • [35]Shortt N, Moore A, Coombes M: Defining regions for locality health care planning: a multidimensional approach. Soc Sci Med 2005, 60(12):2725.
  • [36]Bartlet M, Coldefy M, Collin C, Lucas-Gabrielli V: Local Potential Accessibility (LPA): A new measure of accessibility to Private General Practitioners. Questions d’economie de la Sante: Institut de recherche et documentation en economie de la sante; 2012:1-4. No 174
  • [37]Vallee J, Chauvin P: Investigating the effects of medical density on health-seeking behaviours using a multiscale approach to residential and activity spaces. Results from a prospective cohort study in the Paris metropolitan area, France. Int J Health Geogr 2012, 11:54. 26 December 2012 BioMed Central Full Text
  • [38]Coldefy M, Lucas-Gabrielli V: The health area, a planning tool for the organisation of care supply and health policy?. Questions d’economie de la Sante: Institut de recherche et documentation en economie de la sante; 2012:1-8. No 175
  • [39]Rainham D, McDowell L, Krewski D, Sawada M: Conceptualisation the healthscape: contributions of time geography, location technologies and spatial ecology to place and health research. Soc Sci Med 2010, 70(5):668-676.
  • [40]Wiles JL, Rosenberg MW: The Role of Scale in Conceptualising Primary Health Care Practice: Considering Social and Institutional Structures and Systems. In Primary Health Care: People, Practice, Place. Edited by Crooks VA, Andrews GJ. Ashgate Publishing Company; 2009. Chapter 5
  • [41]Mowbray CT, Woolley ME, Grogan-Kaylor A, Gant LM, Gilster ME, Williams Shanks TR: Neighbourhood research from a spatially oriented strengths perspective. J Commun Psychol 2007, 35(5):667-680.
  • [42]Van Dyck D, Sallis JF, Cardon G, Deforche B, Adams MA, Germia C, De Bourdeaudhuij I: Associations of neighbourhood characteristics with active park use: an observational study in two cities in the USA and Belgium. Int J Health Geogr 2013, 12:26. 7 May 2013 BioMed Central Full Text
  • [43]Bell S, Wilson K, Bissonnette L, Shah T: Access to primary health care: does neighbourhood of residence matter? Ann Assoc Am Geogr 2013, 103(1):85-105.
  • [44]Bissonnette L, Wilson K, Shah TI: Neighbourhoods and potential access to health care: the role of spatial and aspatial factors. Health Place 2012, 18(4):841-853.
  • [45]Whynes DK, Thorton P: Measuring concentration in primary care. Health Care Manag Sci 2000, 3:1.
  • [46]Coffee NT, Lockwood T, Hugo G, Paquet C, Howard NJ, Daniel M: Relative residential property value as a socio-economic status indicator for health research. Int J Health Geogr 2013, 12:22. 15 April 2013 BioMed Central Full Text
  • [47]McLean G, Guthrie B, Watt G, Gabbay M, O’Donnell CA: Practice postcode versus patient population: a comparison of data sources in England and Scotland. Int J Health Geogr 2008, 7:37. 16 July 2008 BioMed Central Full Text
  • [48]Lebel A, Pampalon R, Villeneuve PY: A multi-perspective approach for defining neighbourhood units in the context of a study on health inequalities in the Quebec City region. Int J Health Geogr 2007, 6:27. 5 July 2007 BioMed Central Full Text
  • [49]Odoi A, Wray R, Emo M, Birch S, Hutchinson B, Eyles J, Abernathy T: Inequalities in neighbourhood socioeconomic characteristics: potential evidence-base for neighbourhood health planning. Int J Health Geogr 2005, 4:20. 10 August 2005 BioMed Central Full Text
  • [50]Hawthorne TL, Kwan MP: Using GIS and perceived distance to understand the unequal geographies of healthcare in lower-income urban neighbourhoods. Geogr J 2012, 178:1.
  • [51]Speilmann SE, Yoo EH: The spatial dimensions of neighbourhood effects. Soc Sci Med 2009, 68(6):1098-1105.
  • [52]Gordon-Larsen P, Nelson MC, Page P, Popkin BM: Inequality in the built environment underlies key health disparities in physical activity and obesity. Pediatrics 2006, 117(2):417-424.
  • [53]Yiannakoulias N, Bland W, Svenson L: Estimating the effect of turn penalties and traffic congestion on measuring spatial accessibility to primary health care. Appl Geogr Volume 2013, 39:172-182.
  • [54]Mobley LR, Root E, Anselin L, Lozano-Gracia N, Koschinsky J: Spatial analysis of elderly access to primary care services. Int J Health Geogr 2006, 5:19. 15 May 2006 BioMed Central Full Text
  • [55]Wang L: Immigration, ethnicity, and accessibility to culturally diverse family physicians. Health Place 2007, 13(3):656-671.
  • [56]Wanga L, Roisman D: Modelling spatial accessibility of immigrants to culturally diverse family physicians. Prof Geographer 2011, 63(1):73-91.
  • [57]Hsin-Chung L: The association of spatial accessibility to health care services with health utilisation and health status among people with disabilities. Ohio Link Electronic Theses and Dissertations Centre; 2010:1-19.
  • [58]McGrail MR, Humphreys JS: Measuring spatial accessibility to primary care in rural areas: improving the effectiveness of the two step floating catchment area method. Appl Geogr 2009, 4:533-541.
  • [59]Barnard DK, Hu W: The population health approach: health GIS as a bridge from theory to practice. Int J Health Geogr 2005, 4:23. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [60]Turnbull J, Martin D, Lattimer V, Pope C, Culliford D: Does distance matter? Geographical variation in GP out-of-hours service use: an observational study. Br J Gen Pract 2008, 58(552):471-477.
  • [61]Philips H, Remmen R, De Paepe P, Buylaert W, Van Royen P: Out of hours care: a profile analysis of patients attending the emergency department and the general practitioner on call. BMC Fam Pract 2010, 11:88. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [62]Higgs G: A literature review of the Use of GIS – based measures of access to health care services. Health Serv Outcome Res Methodol 2004, 5:120.
  • [63]McGrail MR: Spatial accessibility of primary health care utilising the two step floating catchment area method: an assessment of recent improvements. Int J Health Geogr 2012, 11:50. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [64]Luo W: Using a GIS-based floating catchment method to assess areas with shortage of physicians. Health Place 2004, 10(1):1-11.
  • [65]Wei L, Qi Y: An enhanced two-step floating catchment area (E2SFCA)method for measuring spatial accessibility to primary care physicians. Health Place 2009, 2009(15):1100-1107.
  • [66]Fahui W, Wei L: Assessing spatial and non-spatial factors for healthcare access: towards an integrated approach to defining health professional shortage areas. Health Place 2005, 2009(11):131-146.
  • [67]Roeger SL, Reed R: Equity of access in the spatial distribution of GPs within an Australian metropolitan city. Aust J Prim Health 2010, 16(4):284-290.
  • [68]Yang DH, George R, Mullner R: Comparing GIS-based methods of measuring spatial accessibility to health services. J Med Syst 2006, 30(1):23-32.
  • [69]Liu Y, Wong SY, Jin T: Equality of spatial access to primary health services for Singapore’s baby boomers. Asian Popul Stud 2009, 5(2):171-188.
  • [70]Wong LY, Heng BH, Cheah JTS, Tan CB: Using spatial accessibility to identify polyclinic service gaps and volume of under-served population in Singapore using Geographic Information System. Int J Health Plann Manag 2012, 27(3):e173-e185.
  • [71]Wang L: Analysing spatial accessibility to health care: a case study of access by different immigrant groups to primary care physicians in Toronto. Ann GIS 2011, 17(4):237-251.
  • [72]Bagheri N: Modelling accessibility to primary care using a spatial accessibility index and a need index. Hawai’I J Public Health1 2008, 1(1):14-27.
  • [73]McGrail MR, Humphreys JS: A new index of access to primary care services in rural areas. Aust N Z J Public Health 2009, 33(5):418-423.
  • [74]Russell DJ, Humphreys JS, Ward B, Chisholm MC, Buykx P, McGrail M, Wakerman J: Helping policy-makers address rural health access problems. Aust J Rural Health Alliance 2013, 21(2):61-71.
  • [75]Escobar F, Williamson I, Waters E, Green J, Hugo G, Rudd C: The Role of GIS in Management of Primary Health Care Services. Christchurch NZ: Presented at 25th Annual Conference of the Australian Urban and Regional Information Systems Assoc; 1997.
  • [76]Samarasundera E, Walsh T, Cheng T, Koenig A, Jattansingh K, Solijak M: Methods and tools for geographical mapping in primary health care. Prim Health Care Res Dev 2012, 13(01):10-21.
  • [77]Drackley A, Newbold KB, Taylor C: Defining socially-based spatial boundaries in the region of peel, Ontario. Canada. Int J Health Geogr 2011, 10:38. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [78]Luo W, Whippo T: Variable catchment sizes for the two-step floating catchment area (2SFCA) method. Health Place 2012, 18(4):789-795.
  • [79]Langford M, Higgs G: Measuring potential access to primary healthcare services: the influence of alternative spatial representations of population. Prof Geography 2006, 58(3):294-306.
  • [80]Delamater PL, Messina JP, Shortridge A, Grady SC: Measuring geographic access to health care: raster and network methods. Int J Health Geogr 2012, 11:15. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [81]Bates A: The development of a “Postcode Best Fit” methodology for producing Population Estimates for different geographies. Popul Trends 2008, 133:28-34.
  • [82]Foley R, Charlton MC, Stewart A: GIS in Health and Social Care Planning. In Handbook of Theoretical and Quantitative Geography. Lausanne: Univ de Lausanne-Faculte des geosciences et de l’environnement; 2012:73-115.
  • [83]Guagliardo MF: Spatial accessibility of primary care: concepts, methods and challenges. Int J Health Geogr 2004, 3(3):10.
  • [84]Salze P, Banos A, Oppert JM, Charreire H, Casey R, Simon C, Chaix B, Badariotti D, Weber C: Estimating spatial accessibility to facilities on the regional scale: an extended commuting-based interaction potential model. Int J Health Geogr 2011, 10:2. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [85]Boulos M: Towards evidence-based. GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom. Int J Health Geogr 2004, 3:1.
  • [86]Farry P, Thompson R, Robertson H, Benwell G, Williamson M: The role of GIS in supporting evidence-based rural health service planning and evaluation: A New Zealand case study. NZFP 2008, 15:6.
  • [87]Taylor DM, Yeager VA, Ouimet C, Menachemi N: Using GIS for administrative decision-making in a local public health setting. Public Health Rep 2012, 127:347-353.
  • [88]Liu JJ, Bellamy G, Barnet B, Weng S: Bypass of local primary care in rural counties: effect of patient and community characteristics. Ann Fam Med 2008, 6(2):124-130.
  • [89]Kroneman MVV, Maarse H, Van der Zee J: Direct access in primary care and patient satisfaction: a European study. Health Policy 2006, 76(1):72-79.
  • [90]Mold JW, Fryer GE, Roberts AM: When do older patients change primary care physicians? J Am Board Fam Pract 2004, 17(6):453-460.
  • [91]Comber AJ, Brunsdon C, Radburn R: A spatial analysis of variations in health access: linking geography, socio-economic status and access perceptions. Int J Health Geogr 2011, 10:44. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [92]Arora R, Singer J, Arora A: Influence of key variables on the patients’ choice of a physician. Qual Manage Health Care 2004, 13(3):166-173.
  • [93]Mallya G, Pollack CE, Polsky D: Are primary care physicians ready to practice in a consumer-driven environment? Am J Manag Care 2008, 14(10):661-668.
  • [94]Gene-Badia J, Ascaso C, Escaramis-Babiano G, Catalan-Ramos A, Pujoi-Ribera E, Samprietro-Colom L: Population and primary health-care team characteristics explain the quality of service. Health Policy 2008, 86(2–3):335-344.
  • [95]Greener I: Are the assumptions underlying patients choice realistic? A review of the evidence. Br Med Bull 2007, 83:249-258.
  • [96]Busato A, Donges A, Herren S, Widmer M, Marian F: Health status and health care utilisation of patients in complementary and conventional primary care in Switzerland – an observational study. Fam Prac Adv Access 2005, 23(1):1-6.
  • [97]Landon BE, Normand SL, Frank R, McNeil BJ: Characteristics of medical practices in three developed managed care markets. Health Serv Res 2005, 40(3):675-696.
  • [98]McRae I: Doctors at Work: Determinants of the supply and demand in the Australian GP market. ANU: Ph D thesis; 2008:183-184.
  • [99]Busato A, Matter P, Kunzi B: Factors related to treatment intensity in Swiss primary care. BMC Health Serv Res 2009, 9:49. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [100]Busato A, Kunzi B: Primary care physician supply and other determinants of health care utilisation: the case of Switzerland. BMC Health Serv Res 2008, 8:8. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [101]Punka H: Primary care strategies for 3 market types. Becker’s Hospital Review 2012, 1. http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-physicianrelationships/building-a-competitive-model webcite
  • [102]Sofianopoulou E, Rushton S, Rubin G, Pless-Mulloli T: Defining GP practice areas based on true service utilisation. Health Place 2012, 18(6):1248-1254.
  • [103]Fulop G, Kopetsch T, Schope P: Catchment areas of medical practices and the role played by geographical distance in the patient’s choice of doctor. Springer-Verlag 2011, 46(3):691-706. Geographics December 2009). and The Annals of Regional Science
  • [104]Rudavsky R, Pollack CE, Mehrotra A: The geographic distribution, ownership, process, and scope of practice at retail clinics. Am Coll Phys Intern Med 2009, 151:5.
  • [105]Reid RO, Ashwood JS, Friedberg MW, Weber ES, Setodji CM, Mehrotra A: Retail clinic visits and receipt of primary care. J Gen Intern Med 2013, 28(4):504-512.
  • [106]Kissinger M: Retail health clinics drive innovation into primary care practice. J Med Prac Manag 2008, 23(5):314-319.
  • [107]Gingrich J: Making markets in the welfare state: the politics of varying market reforms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2011.
  • [108]Pollock A, Price D, Viebrock E, Miller E, Watt G: The market in primary care. BMJ 2007, 6:335-475.
  • [109]Pollock AM, Price D: Loss of population data sources when health systems are not responsible for geographically defined populations: Implications of the Health and Social care Act of 2012 England. Evid Based Med 2014, 19(1):4-5.
  • [110]Ellins J, Ham C, Parker H: Opening up the primary medical care market. BMJ 2009, 338:b1127.
  • [111]Roland M, Guthrie B, Thorne C: Primary medical care in the united kingdom. J Am Board Fam Pract 2012, 25(Suppl/):S6-S11.
  • [112]Lewis RQ, Thorlby R: Liberalising the health care market: the new government’s ambition for the English National Health Service. Int J Health Serv 2011, 41(3):565-574.
  • [113]McDonald R: Market reforms in English primary medical care: medicine, habitus and the public sphere. Sociol Health Illn 2009, 31(5):659-672.
  • [114]Turner D, Salway S, Mir G, Ellison G, Skinner J, Carter L, Bostan B: Prospects for progress on health inequalities in England in the post-primary care trust era: professional views on challenges, risks and opportunities. BMC Public Health 2013, 13:274. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [115]Stange K: How does provider supply and regulation influence health care markets? Evidence from nurse practitioners and physicians assistants. NBER Working Paper No. 19172. The National Bureau of Economic Research; 2013.
  • [116]Bernstein AB, Gauthier AK: Defining competition in markets: why and how? Health Serv Res 1998, 33(5 Pt 2):1421-1438.
  • [117]McDonald J, Ollerenshaw A: Priority setting in primary health care: a framework for local catchments. Rural Remote Health 2011, 11(2):1714.
  • [118]Howell B: Restructuring Primary Health Care Markets in New Zealand: from Welfare Benefits to Insurance Markets. Aust N Z Health Policy 2005, 2:20. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [119]Gresenz CR, Rogowski J, Escarce JJ: Health care markets, the safety net, and utilisation of care among the uninsured. Health Serv Res 2007, 42(1 Pt 1):239-264.
  • [120]Mwachofi A, Al-Asaf AF: Health care market deviations from the ideal market. Sultan Qaboos Univ Med J 2011, 11(3):328-337.
  • [121]Maljers J: Market forces inevitable in health care. Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd 2006, 150(18):1014.
  • [122]Porell FW, Liu K, Brungo DP: Agency and market area factors affecting home health agency supply changes. Health Serv Res Oct 2006, 41(5):1847-1875.
  • [123]Gambie M: Building a competitive model for market share and primary care. Becker’s Hospital Review 2012, 1. http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-physicianrelationships/building-a-competitive-model webcite
  • [124]Allan D, Del Fante P, Reeves J, Stratford D, Miller J: How can spatial analysis inform the workforce gaps in supply and demand for health services?. Australia: Presentation at the Primary Health Research and Information Service Conference (PHC RIS); 2010.
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:4次 浏览次数:25次