Measuring spatiotemporal accessibility to healthcare with multimodal transport modes in the dynamic traffic environment

Author:

Zhou Xinxin123,Yuan LinWang4,Wu Changbin4,Yu Zhaoyuan5,Lei Wang4

Affiliation:

1. School of Geographic and Biologic Information, Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications , Wenyuan Road 9 , Nanjing , Jiangsu, 210023 , China

2. Key Lab of Virtual Geographic Environment (Nanjing Normal University), Ministry of Education , Nanjing , Jiangsu , China

3. Jiangsu Center for Collaborative Innovation in Geographical Information Resource Development and Application , Nanjing , Jiangsu , China

4. College of Geographical Science, Nanjing Normal University , Nanjing , China

5. College of Geographical Science, Nanjing Normal University , Nanjing 210023 , China

Abstract

Abstract Research on healthcare accessibility is developing with a focus on multimodal transport modes (MTMs) and multiple time-series variations. A dynamic traffic environment leads travelers to make distinct decisions at different time slots, which impacts spatiotemporal accessibility markedly. Our article proposes a methodological framework to measure spatiotemporal accessibility with multimodal transportation modes and its variation at multiple time series, while accounting for traffic congestion and the probability of residential transport mode choices in a dynamic traffic environment. We selected Nanjing, China, as the study area and pediatric clinic services (PCS) as specific healthcare services to estimate the spatiotemporal accessibility at four representative time slots. The results indicate that the weight estimation of travel time based on MTMs is more propitious than the travel time of single-mode to present real-world travel characteristics and reflects the spatiotemporal distribution and variation of services synthetically. Furthermore, the spatiotemporal accessibility variation of PCS in peripheral suburbs is more pronounced than that in urban centers and rural areas. This work holds pragmatic implications for policymakers in terms of services planning and allocation optimization to improve the equity of resource supply.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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