Interactive, open source, travel time scenario modelling: tools to facilitate participation in health service access analysis
Authored by Rohan Fisher, Jonatan Lassa
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1186/s12942-017-0086-8
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Abstract
Background: Modelling travel time to services has become a common public
health tool for planning service provision but the usefulness of these
analyses is constrained by the availability of accurate input data and
limitations inherent in the assumptions and parameterisation. This is
particularly an issue in the developing world where access to basic data
is limited and travel is often complex and multi-modal. Improving the
accuracy and relevance in this context requires greater accessibility
to, and flexibility in, travel time modelling tools to facilitate the
incorporation of local knowledge and the rapid exploration of multiple
travel scenarios. The aim of this work was to develop simple open
source, adaptable, interactive travel time modelling tools to allow
greater access to and participation in service access analysis.
Results: Described are three interconnected applications designed to
reduce some of the barriers to the more wide-spread use of GIS analysis
of service access and allow for complex spatial and temporal variations
in service availability. These applications are an open source GIS
tool-kit and two geo-simulation models. The development of these tools
was guided by health service issues from a developing world context but
they present a general approach to enabling greater access to and
flexibility in health access modelling. The tools demonstrate a method
that substantially simplifies the process for conducting travel time
assessments and demonstrate a dynamic, interactive approach in an open
source GIS format. In addition this paper provides examples from
empirical experience where these tools have informed better policy and
planning.
Conclusion: Travel and health service access is complex and cannot be
reduced to a few static modeled outputs. The approaches described in
this paper use a unique set of tools to explore this complexity, promote
discussion and build understanding with the goal of producing better
planning outcomes. The accessible, flexible, interactive and responsive
nature of the applications described has the potential to allow complex
environmental social and political considerations to be incorporated and
visualised. Through supporting evidence-based planning the innovative
modelling practices described have the potential to help local health
and emergency response planning in the developing world.
Tags
Agent-based models
GIS
Exploration
patterns
accessibility
Equity
South-africa
Geographical information-systems
Kenya
Care services