Patterns of Service Utilization across the Full Continuum of Care: Using Patient Journeys to Assess Disparities in Access to Health Services

Author:

Bambi Jonas1ORCID,Dong Gracia Yunruo23ORCID,Santoso Yudi4,Moselle Ken5,Dugas Sophie3,Olobatuyi Kehinde3,Rudnick Abraham6ORCID,Chang Ernie7,Kuo Alex1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Information Science, Faculties of Human and Social Development, Victoria Campus, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada

2. Department of Statistical Sciences, Faculties of Arts and Science, St. George Campus, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada

3. Departments of Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Science, Victoria Campus, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada

4. Independent Researcher, Victoria, BC V8R 5B4, Canada

5. Department of Clinical Psychology, Faculty of Social Science, Victoria Campus, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada

6. Departments of Psychiatry and Bioethics, School of Occupational Therapy, Faculties of Medicine and Health, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada

7. Retired Physician and Independent Computer Scientist, Victoria, BC V9C 4B1, Canada

Abstract

Healthcare organizations have a contractual obligation to the public to address population-level inequities to health services access and shed light on them. Various studies have focused on achieving equitable access to healthcare services for vulnerable patients. However, these studies do not provide a nuanced perspective based on the local reality across the full continuum of care. In previous work, graph topology was used to provide visual depictions of the dynamics of patients’ movement across a complex healthcare system. Using patients’ encounters data represented as a graph, this study expands on previous work and proposes a methodology to identify and quantify cohort-specific disparities in accessing healthcare services across the continuum of care. The result has demonstrated that a more nuanced approach to assessing access-to-care disparity is doable using patients’ patterns of service utilization from a longitudinal cross-continuum healthcare dataset. The proposed method can be used as part of a toolkit to support healthcare organizations that wish to structure their services to provide better care to their vulnerable populations based on the local realities. This provides a first step in addressing inequities for vulnerable patients in accessing healthcare services. However, additional steps need to be considered to fully address these inequities.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference37 articles.

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3. Gilliland, J.A., Shah, T.I., Clark, A., Sibbald, S., and Seabrook, J.A. (2019). A geospatial approach to understanding inequalities in accessibility to primary care among vulnerable populations. PLoS ONE, 14.

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