CHARE-GD I Subproject 1: Cross-Border Health Data Compass as a Basis for Comparative Studies
PIs: Prof. Dr. Andreas Hein, Prof. Dr. Mark Schweda, Prof. Dr. Jochen Mierau, Prof. Dr. Viola Angelini, Dr. Tobias Vogt
For other languages, see Deutsch and Nederlands.
About the project
The quality and availability of patient care in the healthcare system in both Germany and the Netherlands varies from region to region. These regional differences in care, together with demographic, socio-economic and natural conditions, overlap with the organisation of two different national healthcare systems to form a complex overall situation. Are there differences in the quality of healthcare between rural and urban regions in the two countries? What is the potential of cross-border care for underserved areas? In order for researchers to answer these and other questions, small-scale data and suitable methods are required. The project aims to lay these foundations.
Investigation of the location typification of hospitals by zones of potential accessibility.
Are there differences in the quality of health care between rural and urban regions? To answer this question, a differentiation of the location of health care facilities is essential. A large part of the relevant literature uses the spatial typology of the “Bundesinstituts für Bau-, Stadt- und Raumforschung“ (BBSR, Federal Institute for Research on Building, Urban Affairs and Spatial Development) for this purpose. The present work looks at the population structures in the catchment areas of German hospitals by means of the BBSR spatial types. The analysis of the potential catchment areas indicates that the classification of BBSR location types can only be used to a limited extent in the context of health care research in peripheral regions.
Would you like to know more?
You can find this study here: https://gispoint.de/fileadmin/user_upload/paper_gis_open/AGIT_2022/537728011.pdf
Specht, Sebastian; Schnack, Helge; Krauskopf, Jan Elmar; Hein, Andreas (2022) Untersuchung der Lage-Typisierung von Krankenhäusern durch Zonen potenzieller Erreichbarkeit. In: AGIT ‒ Journal für Angewandte Geoinformatik, 8-2022. doi.org/10.14627/537728011
Evaluation by accessibility index differences of the cross-border potential for general inpatient care in the Ems-Dollart Region, a Dutch-German cross-border region
Access to healthcare in border regions is hampered by the very existence of the border and the limitations of cross-border cooperation between healthcare systems. This work examined the status quo of access to inpatient care at a high level of spatial detail and the potential impact of a cross-border cooperation in the Ems-Dollart border Region (EDR), a region located in the northern Dutch-German border area. A cross-border data model of inpatient care for Germany and The Netherlands was created using hospital beds as supply and 1-km² gridded population data as demand. The enhanced the two-step floating catchment area (E2SFCA) algorithm was applied to match supply and demand using road accessibility as intermediary. The model was calculated both for national and cross-border accessibility scenarios, with results standardised against national averages to account for systemic differences between German and Dutch healthcare settings. The resulting maps of spatial access to inpatient care capacity showed that the region has access rates below the national averages, with access rates in The Netherlands showing greater spatial variation than seen in Germany. The border appeared to be less important as cause of low access rates than other factors, such as the presence of the North Sea coast. The model results for cross-border hospital care showed a very local potential with access gains for only 2.2% of the population in the EDR, mostly in The Netherlands. This increase was drawn from wide areas with average and high access rates from both Germany and The Netherlands.
Would you like to know more?
You can find this study here: http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/gh.2025.1381
Specht, Sebastian, Schnack, Helge, Hein, Andreas (2025). Evaluation by accessibility index differences of the cross-border potential for general inpatient care in the Ems-Dollart Region, a Dutch-German cross-border area. Geospatial Health, 20(2).