Scientific Data (Aug 2024)

Where should we go - Estimating travel times for modelling accessibility to 24-hour emergency departments in Canada

  • Tomoko McGaughey,
  • Paul A. Peters

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-024-03691-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Estimating travel time to 24-hour emergency services is an important component to modelling accessibility of health services, particularly for rural areas. However, methods used to estimate travel time vary significantly, are not representative of the residential population, and are not openly validated. This makes the assessment of travel-based accessibility metrics between studies incomparable. To address this issue and develop a standardized measurement of emergency service access, this study utilized small geographic units (Dissemination Areas – DA) and geographical boundaries representative of municipal equivalents (Census Subdivision – CSD). Estimated travel times between the centroid of an inhabited DA to each 24-hr emergency department was computed with population-weighted travel times generated for each CSD. This dataset provides a nationally consistent measurement of proximity to emergency services accounting for travel pathing and population distribution. This methodology can be extended to generate estimated shortest travel routes for other healthcare resources or develop actual travel routes based on individuals’ experiences with the healthcare system.