The use of health
care services in Michigan, like their use in the United States
as a whole, is highly localized. Most Americans use the services
of physicians whose practices are nearby. Physicians, in turn,
are usually affiliated with hospitals that are near their practices.
As a result, when patients are admitted to hospitals, the admission
generally takes place within a relatively short distance of where
the patient lives. Although the distances from homes to hospitals
vary with geography people who live in rural areas travel
farther than those who live in cities in general most patients
are admitted to a hospital which provides an appropriate level
of care close to where they live.
The Medicare program
maintains exhaustive records of hospitalizations, which makes
it possible to define the patterns of use of hospital care. When
Medicare enrollees are admitted to hospitals, the program’s records
identify both the patients’ places of residence (by ZIP Code)
and the hospitals where the admissions took place (by a unique
numerical identifier). These files provide a reliable basis for
determining the geographic pattern of health care use, because
research shows that the migration patterns of patients in the
Medicare program are similar to those for younger patients.
Medicare records
of hospitalizations were used to define 3,436 geographically distinct
hospital service areas in the United States. In each hospital
service area, most of the care received by Medicare patients is
provided by hospitals within the area. There are 109 of these
hospital service areas in Michigan. The maps in this section show
the location of each of these areas. Hospital service areas have
been further aggregated into hospital referral regions, based
on the pattern of use of cardiac surgery and neurosurgery. The
maps also show the hospital referral regions to which the hospital
service areas belong. There are 15 hospital referral regions in
Michigan.
A detailed description
of how hospital service areas and hospital referral regions were
defined, and of the methodologies used to create the Dartmouth
Atlas of Health Care in Michigan, is included in the Appendix
on Methods.
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NOTICE
TO ATLAS READERS
While not giving answers, the atlas raises questions about
health care service use that merit careful consideration. "High"
rates of use are not necessarily bad and "low" volumes
good (or vice versa). Our goal is to move toward rates that are
consistent with high quality health care, which need to be determined
with local clinical, community and patient discussion and dialogue.
The atlas is not a physician or hospital report card. When reviewing
data, note that the Hospital Service Areas in the atlas were defined
by the atlas author. They may differ significantly from what a
hospital considers its market area.

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