Ph. D. Thesis.Accessibility of primary healthcare (PHC) services is crucial for maintaining the good health of
a population. Not only is health(care) associated with quality of life and socioeconomic
productivity, systematic variations in healthcare accessibility are matters of social justice.
Consequently, the overall goal of this project is to comprehensively analyze and explain smallarea need and accessibility of PHC services in Nigeria through a case study of Kogi State, with
a view to making policy-relevant recommendations. To this end, both quantitative and
qualitative methods are synthesized in an ‘explanatory sequential mixed methods research
design’, which also features innovative data exploitations. This entails a synergy of:
Automated Zone Design method, Spatial Microsimulation Modelling, and Generalized TwoStep Floating Catchment Area method for quantitative analysis as well as qualitative
framework thematic analysis, to obtain research findings that are more robust than existing
studies. In this way, genuine small-area variations in PHC need and accessibility are revealed
and explicated, including extreme Medically Underserved Areas (eMUAs). Urban areas are
more accessible than rural areas, as expected. Of senatorial districts, Kogi Central has the best
healthcare accessibility because of its topography. Furthermore, these variations are
mediated by the extant sub-optimal zoning system in Nigeria, which is a product of
problematic historical political processes. Not only are eMUAs both very remote and rural,
they also lack basic social amenities. Hence, it is not surprising that research participants
expressed a myriad of dire disincentives in meeting their PHC needs. These difficulties can be
mitigated by improving the quality of road infrastructure and ensuring an optimal socio-spatial
configuration of PHC services. Broad mechanisms of social exclusion are also implicated in
causing access-related disutility of PHC. It is therefore crucial that holistic interventions to
alleviate social exclusion are enacted, since previous efforts at addressing only proximal
concerns of PHC accessibility have proven unsuccessful.
Keywords: Primary Healthcare Needs, Spatial Accessibility, Mixed Methods Research,
Automated Zone Design, Spatial Microsimulation, Small-Area Variations.Newcastle University Overseas Research
Scholarship (NUORS), Research Excellence Academy of the Humanities and Social
Science Faculty (HaSS RE
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