Ensuring widespread accessibility of healthcare services is a crucial policy objective. Accordingly, the Italian National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP) has prioritized territorial medicine, channeling post-pandemic investments toward the restructuring of primary care services. A notable change is the establishment of Community Healthcare Centers (CHCs). This paper investigates how CHCs contribute to the accessibility of healthcare in urban and rural areas. By leveraging a comprehensive dataset of general practitioners’ availability and estimating future demand-and-supply scenarios, we examine the impact of CHCs under two different capacity allocation strategies. Strategy 1—Capacity expansion—involves allocating additional service hours of general practitioners to CHCs in order to maximize accessibility. Strategy 2—Capacity redistribution—accounts for the persistent shortage of healthcare professionals faced by Italy in the recent years by reallocating a portion of general practitioners’ current services from their existing workplace locations to CHCs. Our results indicate that CHCs have the potential to maintain current accessibility levels and also enhance them in the years to come. Moreover, we demonstrate that simply redistributing the current capacity can improve future accessibility. Finally, we show that a mix of the capacity expansion and redistribution strategies (Strategy 3) can maximize accessibility in the future, limiting the need for new professional staff.
(2025). Enhancing patient accessibility of primary care: the redesign of Italian territorial medicine [journal article - articolo]. In HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT SCIENCE. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/309365
Enhancing patient accessibility of primary care: the redesign of Italian territorial medicine
Morlotti, Chiara;Cattaneo, Mattia;Paleari, Stefano;
2025-10-04
Abstract
Ensuring widespread accessibility of healthcare services is a crucial policy objective. Accordingly, the Italian National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP) has prioritized territorial medicine, channeling post-pandemic investments toward the restructuring of primary care services. A notable change is the establishment of Community Healthcare Centers (CHCs). This paper investigates how CHCs contribute to the accessibility of healthcare in urban and rural areas. By leveraging a comprehensive dataset of general practitioners’ availability and estimating future demand-and-supply scenarios, we examine the impact of CHCs under two different capacity allocation strategies. Strategy 1—Capacity expansion—involves allocating additional service hours of general practitioners to CHCs in order to maximize accessibility. Strategy 2—Capacity redistribution—accounts for the persistent shortage of healthcare professionals faced by Italy in the recent years by reallocating a portion of general practitioners’ current services from their existing workplace locations to CHCs. Our results indicate that CHCs have the potential to maintain current accessibility levels and also enhance them in the years to come. Moreover, we demonstrate that simply redistributing the current capacity can improve future accessibility. Finally, we show that a mix of the capacity expansion and redistribution strategies (Strategy 3) can maximize accessibility in the future, limiting the need for new professional staff.| File | Dimensione del file | Formato | |
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