L'accessibilité transfrontalière aux maternités Enjeux territoriaux d'une coopération sanitaire dans la Grande Région

L'accessibilité transfrontalière aux maternités Enjeux territoriaux d'une coopération sanitaire dans la Grande Région

Border Region
Greater Region
Language(s)
Français
Introduction

With a view to cross-border territorial development in the healthcare field and through the issue of access to maternity hospitals, this study aims to make a geographical contribution whilst starting from a method developed -based approach described in this communication is intended to be reproduced in the 29 countries in the ESPON area.

Summary

This study is an opportunity to analyse the consequences (for the citizen) of the setting up of space that is a genuine cross-border space as regards access to maternity care. It also underscores the importance of health cooperation in the Greater Region in order to avoid having areas of vulnerability. The examples studied in this regional space provide useful information for decision-makers in terms of territorial development. The analysis underscores the importance health cooperation based on collaboration at different levels: administrative, economic and technical, but also cultural in order to determine whether such an approach is feasible.

Content

The links between health/border, where several entry points can be envisaged. (1) via the law whilst centering the analysis on the conditions of concordance between the different healthcare systems. (2) via economics with a comparative study of healthcare costs, and (3) via the notion of space with location-allocation models. This is a territorial planning perspective aimed at gaining a vision for cross-border decision-making. The method used takes account of the existing healthcare network, whilst varying the openness of the borders in terms of harmonisation of healthcare systems.

The article is structured in 3 parts. First of all, there is a reminder of the basics of the approach, where three parameters form the base for a delineation of areas of influence. Two of them concern the estimation of demand and the analysis, starting with the location of maternity hospitals. Access time represents a distance-time constraint in delineating the areas of influence. A 30 minute threshold was set with a view to emergency use. And this parameter rests on the opening or closing of borders, since if they are closed the threshold is 0 whilst if it is the opposite, accessibility is calculated as if the border did not exist. The capacity of the maternity hospital and demand are also taken into account.

The gains in terms of citizens' access to maternity hospitals in the event of health cooperation are demonstrated in the second part, where three parameters are combined: accessibility, supply and demand, which allows areas of influence to be obtained for each maternity hospital that are not strictly limited.  It is here that a comparison is made between a map where harmonisation of social security systems is taken into account and another where the harmonisation is absent.  This reveals that there are three sectors where opening the border would have a beneficial effect for citizens in terms of access to maternity hospitals. The first sector is the extreme south of Wallonia in contact with France and Luxembourg where Arlon maternity hospital is isolated, which constitutes a vulnerability in the event of saturation or even the closure of this facility as the other maternity hospitals in Wallonia are a considerable distance away. The same situation is observed in the French spatial units in the east of Moselle in contact with Saarland. A third sector represents a more interesting situation, that of the north-west of Luxembourg, where a process of competition between Bastogne maternity hospital (Wallonia) and the one in Wiltz (Luxembourg) is observed. The town of Bastogne is attracted by the maternity hospital in Wiltz (which recorded 145 births with 26 beds), whereas the opposite is not true since the Bastogne hospital is undersized (190 births, but only 13 beds).

The feasibility of a health cooperation initiative requires coordination at the administrative, economic and technical, but also cultural level (overall management of the patient, or in stages). Two examples are highlighted. The first is the situation between Saarland and Lorraine, which presents a high level of discontinuity in the healthcare management area. The second is the situation of Saarbrücken and Forbach, where patients can be taken to either hospital depending on the distance to be covered or the saturation of the different wards. It is by resolving problems of an economic, administrative and practical nature that this last example has demonstrated the feasibility of this type of coordination between healthcare systems.

Conclusions

This article provides a contribution to cross-border cooperation. Beyond the results concerning the cross-border gains in terms of access to care where there is coordination, this approach also reinforces two strong ideas. The first consists of the interest of using fuzzy logic to aid decision-making. This has enabled areas of overlap between the areas of influence of two or more maternity hospitals to be taken into consideration in order reveal situations of territorial vulnerability and robustness and therefore provide decision-makers with useful material on territorial planning. The second idea concerns the use of spatial analysis in border studies, as the methods of spatial analysis have an undeniable advantage in that they can put the territory at the heart of the issues being examined and manage to forge links between research and citizens' expectations insofar as social demand is high when it comes to access to public services. This is an approach that is not intended to be taken in isolation, but to serve as a contribution.

Key Messages

In order to achieve good cooperation between healthcare systems, full coordination at different levels between the different countries in the region is necessary to achieve genuine territorial accessibility to maternity hospitals. The harmonisation of healthcare systems and the setting up of bilateral agreement will enable citizens to have an accessible, genuinely cross-border space.

Lead

CEGUM, Université Paul Verlaine-Metz

Author of the entry
Perrine
Dethier
Contributions

Sophie De Ruffray & Gregory Hamez

Contact Person(s)

Grégory Hamez

Fonction
Professeur
Organisation
LOTERR, Université de Lorraine, France
Date of creation
2019
Publié dans
Frontières et santé. Genèses et maillages des réseaux transfrontaliers, L'Harmattan