Measuring and assessing the spatial access that the urban poor has to public healthcare facilities is critical in planning and improving service delivery in cities. Over the past two decades, studies have introduced a range of spatial methods to do this. However, most of these studies are agnostic to the provider type (private/public) and the target beneficiaries. This study, by Rajeswari Parasa, Isalyne Gennaro, and I, fills that gap by focusing on measuring the access that urban poor have to urban primary health care facilities.
It does this by deploying four models – Euclidean distance-based buffer analysis, road network distance-based buffer analysis, Euclidean distance-based nearest facility analysis, and finally, road network distance-based nearest facility analysis. The models are demonstrated for a non-representative sample of slums identified under Rajiv Awas Yojana (RAY) and the urban primary healthcare centres (UPHCs) in the city of Chennai. The study uses replicable open source GIS-based tools and scripts that can be deployed by other studies. The limitations and computational challenges of each of the models are also briefly discussed. Such studies can generate evidence that feeds into facility planners‘ decision making on managing existing facilities and establishing new ones.
Read the full paper here.