Gesundheitsversorgungsforschung und -epidemiologie
Autoren
Schwendicke, Falk
Jäger, Ralf
Hoffmann, Wolfgang
Jordan, A. Rainer
van den Berg, Neeltje
Schlagwörter
Dental care
Health services accessibility
Health services needs and demand
Publikation — Zeitschriftenbeiträge
Titel
Estimating spatially specific demand and supply of dental services
Untertitel
A longitudinal comparison in Northern Germany
Titel kurz
J Public Health Dent
Titel Ausgeschrieben
Journal of Public Health Dentistry
ISSN
1752-7325 (Electronic); 0022-4006 (Linking)
Jahr
2016
Ausgabe
76
Issue
4
Seitenzahl
269-275
Erscheinungsdatum
01.09.2016
Estimating spatially specific demand and supply of dental services
A longitudinal comparison in Northern Germany
OBJECTIVES: Assessing the spatial distribution of oral morbidity-related demand and the workforce-related supply is relevant for planning dental services. We aimed to establish and validate a model for estimating the spatially specific demand and supply. This model was then applied to compare demand-supply ratios in 2001 and 2011 in the federal state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (Northern Germany).
METHODS: The spatial units were zip code areas. Demand per area was estimated by linking population-specific oral morbidities to working times via insurance claim data. Estimated demand was validated against the provided demand in 2001 and 2011. Supply was calculated for both years using cohort data from the dentist register. The ratio of demand and supply was geographically mapped and its distribution between areas assessed using the Gini coefficient.
RESULTS: Between 2001 and 2011, a significant decrease of the general population (-7.0 percent), the annual demand (-13.1 percent), and the annual supply (-12.9 percent) was recorded. The estimated demands were nearly (2001: -4 percent) and completely (2011: +/-0 percent) congruent with provided demands. The average demand-supply-ratio did not change significantly between 2001 and 2011 (P > 0.05), but was increasingly unequally distributed. In both years, few areas were over-serviced, while many were under-serviced.
CONCLUSIONS: The established model can be used to estimate spatially specific demand and supply.