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Locating helicopter ambulance bases in Iceland : Efficient and fair solutions

Locating helicopter ambulance bases in Iceland : Efficient and fair solutions


Titill: Locating helicopter ambulance bases in Iceland : Efficient and fair solutions
Höfundur: Gunnarsson, Björn
Björnsdóttir, Kristrún María
Dúason, Sveinbjörn
Ingólfsson, Ármann
Útgáfa: 2023-12
Tungumál: Enska
Umfang: 1840171
Háskóli/Stofnun: University of Akureyri
Birtist í: Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine; 31(1)
ISSN: 1757-7241
DOI: 10.1186/s13049-023-01114-9
Efnisorð: Sjúkraflutningar; Air ambulance; Facility location problem; Fairness; Emergency Medicine; Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/4794

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Tilvitnun:

Gunnarsson , B , Björnsdóttir , K M , Dúason , S & Ingólfsson , Á 2023 , ' Locating helicopter ambulance bases in Iceland : Efficient and fair solutions ' , Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine , vol. 31 , no. 1 , 70 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-023-01114-9

Útdráttur:

 
Background Fixed-wing air ambulances play an important role in healthcare in rural Iceland. More frequent use of helicopter ambulances has been suggested to shorten response times and increase equity in access to advanced emergency care. In finding optimal base locations, the objective is often efficiency—maximizing the number of individuals who can be reached within a given time. This approach benefits people in densely populated areas more than people living in remote areas and the solution is not necessarily fair. This study aimed to find efficient and fair helicopter ambulance base locations in Iceland. Methods We used high-resolution population and incident location data to estimate the service demand for helicopter ambulances, with possible base locations limited to twenty-one airports and landing strips around the country. Base locations were estimated using both the maximal covering location problem (MCLP) optimization model, which aimed for maximal coverage of demand, and the fringe sensitive location problem (FSLP) model, which also considered uncovered demand (i.e., beyond the response time threshold). We explored the percentage of the population and incidents covered by one to three helicopter bases within 45-, 60-, and 75-min response time thresholds, conditioned or not, on the single existing base located at Reykjavík Airport. This resulted in a total of eighteen combinations of conditions for each model. The models were implemented in R and solved using Gurobi. Results Model solutions for base locations differed between the demand datasets for two out of eighteen combinations, both with the lowest service standard. Base locations differed between the MCLP and FSLP models for one combination involving a single base, and for two combinations involving two bases. Three bases covered all or almost all demand with longer response time thresholds, and the models differed in four of six combinations. The two helicopter ambulance bases can possibly obtain 97% coverage within 60 min, with bases in Húsafell and Grímsstaðir. Bases at Reykjavík Airport and Akureyri would cover 94.2%, whereas bases at Reykjavík Airport and Egilsstaðir would cover 88.5% of demand. Conclusion An efficient and fair solution would be to locate bases at Reykjavík Airport and in Akureyri or Egilsstaðir.
 
Background: Fixed-wing air ambulances play an important role in healthcare in rural Iceland. More frequent use of helicopter ambulances has been suggested to shorten response times and increase equity in access to advanced emergency care. In finding optimal base locations, the objective is often efficiency—maximizing the number of individuals who can be reached within a given time. This approach benefits people in densely populated areas more than people living in remote areas and the solution is not necessarily fair. This study aimed to find efficient and fair helicopter ambulance base locations in Iceland. Methods: We used high-resolution population and incident location data to estimate the service demand for helicopter ambulances, with possible base locations limited to twenty-one airports and landing strips around the country. Base locations were estimated using both the maximal covering location problem (MCLP) optimization model, which aimed for maximal coverage of demand, and the fringe sensitive location problem (FSLP) model, which also considered uncovered demand (i.e., beyond the response time threshold). We explored the percentage of the population and incidents covered by one to three helicopter bases within 45-, 60-, and 75-min response time thresholds, conditioned or not, on the single existing base located at Reykjavík Airport. This resulted in a total of eighteen combinations of conditions for each model. The models were implemented in R and solved using Gurobi. Results: Model solutions for base locations differed between the demand datasets for two out of eighteen combinations, both with the lowest service standard. Base locations differed between the MCLP and FSLP models for one combination involving a single base, and for two combinations involving two bases. Three bases covered all or almost all demand with longer response time thresholds, and the models differed in four of six combinations. The two helicopter ambulance bases can possibly obtain 97% coverage within 60 min, with bases in Húsafell and Grímsstaðir. Bases at Reykjavík Airport and Akureyri would cover 94.2%, whereas bases at Reykjavík Airport and Egilsstaðir would cover 88.5% of demand. Conclusion: An efficient and fair solution would be to locate bases at Reykjavík Airport and in Akureyri or Egilsstaðir.
 

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