2021
DOI: 10.1007/s41324-021-00405-6
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Maximal covering location problem for nuclear medicine clinics allocation in Nigeria

Abstract: Several studies demonstrate the usefulness of nuclear medicine procedures for public health problems in developing countries. Little is known about the location and accessibility of nuclear medicine facilities, thus making the assessment of their location and allocation an integral part in strengthening nuclear medicine services in these countries. This paper employed the Maximal Covering Location Problem to identify the optimum numbers of University Teaching and Research Hospitals (UTRHs) that can be upgraded… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Penelitian berikutnya menggunakan CMCLP untuk mengidentifikasi jumlah yang optimal dari University Teaching and Research Hospitals (UTRHs) yang dapat ditingkatkan untuk menyediakan layanan Kedokteran Nuklir (NM) ke jumlah terbesar Local Government Areas (LGA) dalam ambang batas 200 km waktu mengemudi di Nigeria (Taiwo & Orunmuyi, 2021).…”
Section: Pendahuluanunclassified
“…Penelitian berikutnya menggunakan CMCLP untuk mengidentifikasi jumlah yang optimal dari University Teaching and Research Hospitals (UTRHs) yang dapat ditingkatkan untuk menyediakan layanan Kedokteran Nuklir (NM) ke jumlah terbesar Local Government Areas (LGA) dalam ambang batas 200 km waktu mengemudi di Nigeria (Taiwo & Orunmuyi, 2021).…”
Section: Pendahuluanunclassified
“…The need of nuclear medicine facilities is required at a coverage area of 200 km per facility. Based on this fact, Indonesia needs about 16 nuclear medicine facilities which are spread evenly over the land area of Indonesia 2.01 million kilometers [7,8]. Therefore, it is still necessary to add and reactivate nuclear medicine facilities in Indonesia to be able to tackle nearly 1 million cases of cancer in Indonesia in the 5-years prevalent case [9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%