The effect of sampling health facilities on estimates of effective coverage: a simulation study.

IF 3 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Emily D Carter, Abdoulaye Maiga, Mai Do, Glebelho Lazare Sika, Rosine Mosso, Abdul Dosso, Melinda K Munos
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background: Most existing facility assessments collect data on a sample of health facilities. Sampling of health facilities may introduce bias into estimates of effective coverage generated by ecologically linking individuals to health providers based on geographic proximity or administrative catchment.

Methods: We assessed the bias introduced to effective coverage estimates produced through two ecological linking approaches (administrative unit and Euclidean distance) applied to a sample of health facilities. Our analysis linked MICS household survey data on care-seeking for child illness and childbirth care with data on service quality collected from a census of health facilities in the Savanes region of Cote d'Ivoire. To assess the bias introduced by sampling, we drew 20 random samples of three different sample sizes from our census of health facilities. We calculated effective coverage of sick child and childbirth care using both ecological linking methods applied to each sampled facility data set. We compared the sampled effective coverage estimates to ecologically linked census-based estimates and estimates based on true source of care. We performed sensitivity analyses with simulated preferential care-seeking from higher-quality providers and randomly generated provider quality scores.

Results: Sampling of health facilities did not significantly bias effective coverage compared to either the ecologically linked estimates derived from a census of facilities or true effective coverage estimates using the original data or simulated random quality sensitivity analysis. However, a few estimates based on sampling in a setting where individuals preferentially sought care from higher-quality providers fell outside of the estimate bounds of true effective coverage. Those cases predominantly occurred using smaller sample sizes and the Euclidean distance linking method. None of the sample-based estimates fell outside the bounds of the ecologically linked census-derived estimates.

Conclusions: Our analyses suggest that current health facility sampling approaches do not significantly bias estimates of effective coverage produced through ecological linking. Choice of ecological linking methods is a greater source of bias from true effective coverage estimates, although facility sampling can exacerbate this bias in certain scenarios. Careful selection of ecological linking methods is essential to minimize the potential effect of both ecological linking and sampling error.

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抽样卫生设施对有效覆盖率估计的影响:模拟研究。
背景:大多数现有设施评估收集卫生设施样本的数据。对卫生设施进行抽样可能会使根据地理邻近程度或行政集水区在生态上将个人与卫生服务提供者联系起来所产生的有效覆盖率估计产生偏差。方法:我们评估了通过两种生态联系方法(行政单位和欧几里得距离)对卫生设施样本进行的有效覆盖率估算所引入的偏差。我们的分析将多指标类集调查关于儿童疾病和分娩护理的家庭调查数据与从科特迪瓦萨瓦内地区卫生设施普查中收集的服务质量数据联系起来。为了评估抽样带来的偏差,我们从卫生设施普查中随机抽取了20个三种不同样本量的样本。我们使用应用于每个采样设施数据集的生态链接方法计算了患病儿童和分娩护理的有效覆盖率。我们将抽样的有效覆盖率估计与生态相关的基于人口普查的估计和基于真实护理来源的估计进行了比较。我们通过模拟高质量提供者的优先求诊和随机生成的提供者质量评分进行敏感性分析。结果:与从设施普查中得出的生态相关估计值或使用原始数据或模拟随机质量敏感性分析得出的真实有效覆盖率估计值相比,卫生设施的抽样没有显著偏差。然而,在个人优先向高质量提供者寻求护理的情况下,一些基于抽样的估计超出了真正有效覆盖率的估计范围。这些情况主要发生在使用较小的样本量和欧几里得距离连接方法。没有一个基于样本的估计超出了与生态相关的人口普查估计的范围。结论:我们的分析表明,目前的卫生设施抽样方法对通过生态联系产生的有效覆盖率的估计没有显著偏差。生态联系方法的选择是真正有效覆盖率估计偏差的更大来源,尽管在某些情况下设施抽样会加剧这种偏差。仔细选择生态连接方法是必要的,以尽量减少生态连接和抽样误差的潜在影响。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Health Geographics
International Journal of Health Geographics PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH -
CiteScore
10.20
自引率
2.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: A leader among the field, International Journal of Health Geographics is an interdisciplinary, open access journal publishing internationally significant studies of geospatial information systems and science applications in health and healthcare. With an exceptional author satisfaction rate and a quick time to first decision, the journal caters to readers across an array of healthcare disciplines globally. International Journal of Health Geographics welcomes novel studies in the health and healthcare context spanning from spatial data infrastructure and Web geospatial interoperability research, to research into real-time Geographic Information Systems (GIS)-enabled surveillance services, remote sensing applications, spatial epidemiology, spatio-temporal statistics, internet GIS and cyberspace mapping, participatory GIS and citizen sensing, geospatial big data, healthy smart cities and regions, and geospatial Internet of Things and blockchain.
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