Geography of medication reimbursements in Belgium: an exploratory analysis

As part of a broader multidisciplinary research project dealing with the association between health and green/blue environments, this paper aims at exploring the spatial variation of medication reimbursements within Belgium. These data were potentially and a priori considered as a proxy for health. ...

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Main Authors: Sonia Trabelsi, Lidia Casas Ruiz, Benoit Nemery, Isabelle Thomas
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Unité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-cités 2021-06-01
Series:Cybergeo
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/36950
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spelling doaj-d0bc0191000a428281bec47ba3a0485c2021-10-05T13:22:29ZdeuUnité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-citésCybergeo1278-33662021-06-0110.4000/cybergeo.36950Geography of medication reimbursements in Belgium: an exploratory analysisSonia TrabelsiLidia Casas RuizBenoit NemeryIsabelle ThomasAs part of a broader multidisciplinary research project dealing with the association between health and green/blue environments, this paper aims at exploring the spatial variation of medication reimbursements within Belgium. These data were potentially and a priori considered as a proxy for health. This paper is purely exploratory: statistical maps, correlations, PCAs and cluster analyses corroborate the results. Five groups of medications prescribed for health disorders associated with the environment have been selected. We show that – at the level of the municipalities – the spatial distributions of the five medication groups are positively correlated to each other (medication consumption co-vary positively in space, whatever their type), but are independent of the environmental and socio-economic conditions measured. Against our expectation, they prove to be negatively correlated to air pollution and green spaces. Strikingly, the spatial distribution of medication prescriptions follows the linguistic border between Flanders and Wallonia.  This implies that the observed differences are mainly due to administrative/political regional differences in terms of health policies, medical schools, pharmaceutical commercial activities, etc. that are hard to quantify (no data, diversity of actors) but should be taken into account in any further explanatory model. Medication reimbursements data correspond to a new type of data, and despite their potential attractiveness for health analyses, extreme care has to be taken when interpreting their spatial variation and their link to health.http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/36950healthhealth geographycartographyspatial behaviorborder
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sonia Trabelsi
Lidia Casas Ruiz
Benoit Nemery
Isabelle Thomas
spellingShingle Sonia Trabelsi
Lidia Casas Ruiz
Benoit Nemery
Isabelle Thomas
Geography of medication reimbursements in Belgium: an exploratory analysis
Cybergeo
health
health geography
cartography
spatial behavior
border
author_facet Sonia Trabelsi
Lidia Casas Ruiz
Benoit Nemery
Isabelle Thomas
author_sort Sonia Trabelsi
title Geography of medication reimbursements in Belgium: an exploratory analysis
title_short Geography of medication reimbursements in Belgium: an exploratory analysis
title_full Geography of medication reimbursements in Belgium: an exploratory analysis
title_fullStr Geography of medication reimbursements in Belgium: an exploratory analysis
title_full_unstemmed Geography of medication reimbursements in Belgium: an exploratory analysis
title_sort geography of medication reimbursements in belgium: an exploratory analysis
publisher Unité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-cités
series Cybergeo
issn 1278-3366
publishDate 2021-06-01
description As part of a broader multidisciplinary research project dealing with the association between health and green/blue environments, this paper aims at exploring the spatial variation of medication reimbursements within Belgium. These data were potentially and a priori considered as a proxy for health. This paper is purely exploratory: statistical maps, correlations, PCAs and cluster analyses corroborate the results. Five groups of medications prescribed for health disorders associated with the environment have been selected. We show that – at the level of the municipalities – the spatial distributions of the five medication groups are positively correlated to each other (medication consumption co-vary positively in space, whatever their type), but are independent of the environmental and socio-economic conditions measured. Against our expectation, they prove to be negatively correlated to air pollution and green spaces. Strikingly, the spatial distribution of medication prescriptions follows the linguistic border between Flanders and Wallonia.  This implies that the observed differences are mainly due to administrative/political regional differences in terms of health policies, medical schools, pharmaceutical commercial activities, etc. that are hard to quantify (no data, diversity of actors) but should be taken into account in any further explanatory model. Medication reimbursements data correspond to a new type of data, and despite their potential attractiveness for health analyses, extreme care has to be taken when interpreting their spatial variation and their link to health.
topic health
health geography
cartography
spatial behavior
border
url http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/36950
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