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Published in: Intensive Care Medicine 3/2014

Open Access 01-03-2014 | Original Article

Access to urban acute care services in high- vs. middle-income countries: an analysis of seven cities

Authors: Shamly Austin, Srinivas Murthy, Hannah Wunsch, Neill K. J. Adhikari, Veena Karir, Kathryn Rowan, Shevin T. Jacob, Jorge Salluh, Fernando A. Bozza, Bin Du, Youzhong An, Bruce Lee, Felicia Wu, Yen-Lan Nguyen, Chris Oppong, Ramesh Venkataraman, Vimalraj Velayutham, Carmelo Dueñas, Derek C. Angus, On behalf of the International Forum of Acute Care Trialists

Published in: Intensive Care Medicine | Issue 3/2014

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Abstract

Purpose

Cities are expanding rapidly in middle-income countries, but their supply of acute care services is unknown. We measured acute care services supply in seven cities of diverse economic background.

Methods

In a cross-sectional study, we compared cities from two high-income (Boston, USA and Paris, France), three upper-middle-income (Bogota, Colombia; Recife, Brazil; and Liaocheng, China), and two lower-middle-income (Chennai, India and Kumasi, Ghana) countries. We collected standardized data on hospital beds, intensive care unit beds, and ambulances. Where possible, information was collected from local authorities. We expressed results per population (from United Nations) and per acute illness deaths (from Global Burden of Disease project).

Results

Supply of hospital beds where intravenous fluids could be delivered varied fourfold from 72.4/100,000 population in Kumasi to 241.5/100,000 in Boston. Intensive care unit (ICU) bed supply varied more than 45-fold from 0.4/100,000 population in Kumasi to 18.8/100,000 in Boston. Ambulance supply varied more than 70-fold. The variation widened when supply was estimated relative to disease burden (e.g., ICU beds varied more than 65-fold from 0.06/100 deaths due to acute illnesses in Kumasi to 4.11/100 in Bogota; ambulance services varied more than 100-fold). Hospital bed per disease burden was associated with gross domestic product (GDP) (R 2 = 0.88, p = 0.01), but ICU supply was not (R 2 = 0.33, p = 0.18). No city provided all requested data, and only two had ICU data.

Conclusions

Urban acute care services vary substantially across economic regions, only partially due to differences in GDP. Cities were poor sources of information, which may hinder their future planning.
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Metadata
Title
Access to urban acute care services in high- vs. middle-income countries: an analysis of seven cities
Authors
Shamly Austin
Srinivas Murthy
Hannah Wunsch
Neill K. J. Adhikari
Veena Karir
Kathryn Rowan
Shevin T. Jacob
Jorge Salluh
Fernando A. Bozza
Bin Du
Youzhong An
Bruce Lee
Felicia Wu
Yen-Lan Nguyen
Chris Oppong
Ramesh Venkataraman
Vimalraj Velayutham
Carmelo Dueñas
Derek C. Angus
On behalf of the International Forum of Acute Care Trialists
Publication date
01-03-2014
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Intensive Care Medicine / Issue 3/2014
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-013-3174-7

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