Locating Automated External Defibrillators in a Complicated Urban Environment Considering a Pedestrian-Accessible Network that Focuses on Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- As shown in Figure 1b, considering the geographical characteristics of a study area is impossible unless the grid size is sufficiently small to distinguish the features from the pedestrian perspective.
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- Distorted results can be obtained if the candidate nodes are simply the centroid of grids or administration boundaries because the grid size changes (i.e., modifiable areal unit problem).
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- Pedestrian barriers such as crosswalks and buildings, which are important components in complicated urban environments, as well as underpasses and overpasses or similar network structures, have 3D information that cannot be represented using the centroid of grids or administration boundaries.
2. Study Area, Data, and Method
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Data Process and Methods
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- The Network Analyst in the ArcMap platform is applied to locate the AEDs.
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- The analysis type in the location-allocation solver in the Network Analyst of ArcMap is adjusted by the “target market share” method to consider the relationship between the pre-installed and additionally installed AEDs.
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- The effective AED coverage (cutoff length) is calculated by considering the normal walking speed of pedestrians.
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- The candidate and demand nodes are extracted based on the pedestrian network and census datasets (i.e., floating population). The details of the candidate and demand nodes are described in the next section.
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- The psychological barriers under emergency situations (e.g., tunnel, crosswalk, and overpass) are determined on the road network to reflect a real-world situation.
2.2.1. Data Description and Process
2.2.2. Finding Optimal Locations for Additional AEDs
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- impedance cutoff (how far can a facility be effective)
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- demand nodes (where needs must be served and contain a certain quantity of service needs)
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- candidate nodes (possible locations for new facilities)
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- network barriers
3. Results and Analysis
4. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | OHCA Cases | Evaluation Methods | Testing Groups |
---|---|---|---|
1 | For all | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the existing and additionally installed AEDs | Control group 1 |
2 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the “filtered” existing AEDs only | Experimental group 1-1 | |
3 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the existing and randomly located AEDs distributed in the entire study area | Experimental group 1-2 | |
4 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the existing and randomly installed AEDs distributed on the road segments | Experimental group 1-3 | |
5 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the existing and randomly located AEDs on the grid base | Experimental group 1-4 | |
6 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and randomly located AEDs on the network junctions | Experimental group 1-6 | |
7 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-installed AEDs (assuming that all pre-installed AEDs are usable) | Experimental group 1-5 | |
1’ | Outdoor | Coverage of the outdoor OHCA cases from the existing and additionally installed AEDs | Control group 2 |
2’ | Coverage of the outdoor OHCA cases from the “filtered” existing AEDs only | Experimental group 2-1 | |
3’ | Coverage of the outdoor OHCA cases from the existing and randomly located AEDs distributed in the entire study area | Experimental group 2-2 | |
4’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the existing and randomly located AEDs distributed on the road segments | Experimental group 2-3 | |
5’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the existing and randomly located AEDs on the grid base | Experimental group 2-4 | |
6’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and randomly located AEDs on the network junctions | Experimental group 2-6 | |
7’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-installed AEDs (assuming that all pre-installed AEDs are usable) | Experimental group 2-5 |
No. | OHCA Cases | Evaluation Methods | Testing Group | Ratio | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | For all | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and additionally installed AEDs | Control group 1 | 516/634 | 81.39 |
2 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the “filtered” pre-existing AEDs only | Experimental group 1-1 | 221/634 | 34.86 | |
3 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and randomly located AEDs | Experimental group 1-2 | 451.83/634 | 71.27 | |
4 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and randomly located AEDs on the road segments only | Experimental group 1-3 | 380.89/634 | 60.08 | |
5 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the existing and randomly located AEDs on the grid base | Experimental group 1-4 | 364.07/634 | 57.42 | |
6 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and randomly located AEDs on the network junctions | Experimental group 1-6 | 393.39/634 | 62.05 | |
7 | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-installed AEDs (assuming that all pre-installed AEDs are usable) | Experimental group 1-5 | 347/634 | 54.73 |
No. | OHCA Cases | Evaluation Methods | Testing Group | Ratio | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1’ | Outdoor | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and additionally installed AEDs | Control group 2 | 92/126 | 73.02 |
2’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the “filtered” pre-existing AEDs only | Experimental group 2-1 | 36/126 | 28.57 | |
3’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and randomly located AEDs | Experimental group 2-2 | 80.9/126 | 64.21 | |
4’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and randomly located AEDs on the road segments only | Experimental group 2-3 | 66.59/126 | 52.06 | |
5’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the existing and randomly located AEDs on the grid base | Experimental group 2-4 | 61.46/126 | 48.78 | |
6’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-existing and randomly located AEDs on the network junctions | Experimental group 2-6 | 60.76/126 | 48.22 | |
7’ | Coverage of the OHCA cases from the pre-installed AEDs (assuming that all pre-installed AEDs are usable) | Experimental group 2-5 | 51/126 | 40.48 |
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Kwon, P.; Kim, M.-J.; Lee, Y.; Yu, K.; Huh, Y. Locating Automated External Defibrillators in a Complicated Urban Environment Considering a Pedestrian-Accessible Network that Focuses on Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests. ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2017, 6, 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi6020039
Kwon P, Kim M-J, Lee Y, Yu K, Huh Y. Locating Automated External Defibrillators in a Complicated Urban Environment Considering a Pedestrian-Accessible Network that Focuses on Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information. 2017; 6(2):39. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi6020039
Chicago/Turabian StyleKwon, Pil, Min-Jun Kim, Youngmin Lee, Kiyun Yu, and Yong Huh. 2017. "Locating Automated External Defibrillators in a Complicated Urban Environment Considering a Pedestrian-Accessible Network that Focuses on Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests" ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 6, no. 2: 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi6020039
APA StyleKwon, P., Kim, M. -J., Lee, Y., Yu, K., & Huh, Y. (2017). Locating Automated External Defibrillators in a Complicated Urban Environment Considering a Pedestrian-Accessible Network that Focuses on Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, 6(2), 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi6020039