Discussion Papers 1988. 
Spatial Organization and Regional Development 180-206. p.
180 
Eva OROSZ 
REGIONAL STRUCTURE AND MAJOR SPATIAL PROCESSES 
OF PUBLIC HEALTH CARE IN HUNGARY 
The first part of the paper deals with the 
regional structure of public health care in Hungary 
in comparison to the prevailing tendencies of re-
gional structure of health care in the developed 
countries and to basic principles and theoretical 
models of regionalization of health systems. The 
second part of the paper analyzes major processes 
underlying regional inequalities in public health 
care, giving priority to the mismatch existing be-
tween the state of health and the supply of health 
services; as well as to contradictions between 
meeting new social needs and the formation of re-
gional differences. 
Introduction  
Since the early 1960s, a new discipline cal-
led the 'geography of health care systems' has been 
developing intensively in addition to the tradi-
tional branch of medical geography, the 'geography 
of diseases' /Mayer 1982; Howe - Phillips 1983; 
Pyle 1976, 1979, 1983/. This new branch of medical 
geography aims primarily at investigating the re-
gional distribution of health manpower, facilities, 
and financial resources; socio-spatial features and 
inequalities of accessibility to health care; and 
at exploring contradictions between the spatial 
processes of health systems and the needs of the 
population. 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
1 8 1 
My research belongs to this new branch of 
medical geography /Orosz 
1985/. In my paper, I 
shall first describe the spatial structure of pub-
lic health care in Hungary, emphasizing the defi-
nite contradiction that exists in the separation 
of the regional structure of public health func-
tions from the regional structure of planning and  
financing of public health care. In the second 
part of the paper, I shall discuss the most im-
portant spatial processes of public health care 
in Hungary that occurred between  1960  and  1985. 
My approach differs from that of health policy 
and of more traditional statistical investigations 
that have dealt with regional differences. 
1. Regional Structure of Public Health  
Regional systems - efforts made to achieve  
a comomise between concentration and  
accessibility  
During the last two or three decades, rapid 
development of health technology had huge impacts 
on the operation, professional, and regional struc-
ture of the health care system. Health technology 
used by hospitals is becoming more and more comlex 
and expensive,which has led to a concentration in 
hospital care. Some of this new technology is worth 
placing only in central hospitals having vast 
catchment areas /partly because of the relatively 
small number of patients requiring special cure/. 
On the other hand, an important concept of the 
philosophy of health care systems is the acces-
sibility of public health care to everyone. In 
meeting the contradictory requirements of effici-
ency and accessibility, the regionalization of 
health care systems has evolved as a compromise 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
182 
/Roemer, 1977, 1979/. 
In a broader sence, by regionalization is 
meant a comprehensive management-organizational- 
operational strategy encompassing the entire 
health system, which includes primary health care. 
In both the narrow and practical sense, regionali-
zation in most countries exists only within the 
system of hospitals. Consequently, further on I 
shall discuss regionalization in the narrow sense. 
Inam ideal model, the institutions /hospi-
tals of various functions/ in a health /hospital/ 
region provide 1 or 2 million inhabitants. Within 
a region, the hierarchy of hospitals is of three 
interdependent levels: 
a/ regional hospitals treating special 
diseases of low frequency and requiring highly ex-
pensive technology and high-level professional 
knowledge; regional hospitals are expected to fulfil 
the task of education and research as well /in a 
theoretical model these hospitals have 500-1,000 
hospital beds/; 
b/ county /province/ hospitals concentrating 
medical professions of medium level /in a theore-
tical model these hospitals have 100-300 hospital 
beds/; 
c/ local, general hospitals of 50-100 hospi-
tal beds with relatively small catchment areas 
/10,000-50,000 inhabitants/; they are expected to 
cure the most general and frequent aliments. 
The catchment area of a regional hospital is com-
prised of catchment areas of several county hospi-
tals, and, similarly, the catchment area of a 
county hospital covers that of several local level 
hospitals. Among hospitals on these three levels, 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
183 
appropriately organized linkages should function 
in the interests of patients to get proper health 
care. 
To sum up, by regionalization is meant a 
strategy of organization and functioning of a 
health system /primarily of hospital care/ in-
volving a larger hierarchy and coordination of 
health services within an extended region. The 
strategy of regionalization involves double-direc-
tion flows of patients between the periphery /local 
level hospitals/ and regional centre, as well as 
diffusion of professional knowledge from the centre 
towards the periphery. Certain indications of the 
regionalization principles mentioned above can be 
noticed in the present hospital structure of all 
developed countries. Deviations, however, are at 
least as important, being expressed partly in hos-
pital structure and in the connections among hospi-
tals assuring more or less 'flows' of patients; 
moreover in financing mechanisms and infrastruc-
tural facilities that strongly influence these 
peculiarities. 
Centralized and incomplete spatial structure  
of the hospital network in Hungary  
The reasons for establishing a regional 
structure of hospital care and the basic principles 
of the system are similar to the model described 
earlier. The administrative organization and finan-
cing of public health are two factors influencing 
practical execution; the unfavourable situation of 
these elements, however, has a rather restricting, 
deforming effect on the implementation of objectives 
of the regional system. 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
184 
Before detailed description, first let's examine 
the main characteristics of the spatial structure 
of hospitals. 
In Hungary, health regions were established 
in 1980, delegating tasks to  4  medical universities 
and  3  county hospitals thereby allowing the delimi-
tation of catchment areas /Ajkai 
et al. 1981/. 
There are manifold differences among regions as 
regards number of population and size of territory 
/Fig. 1/. 
 For example, the territory of the Szeged-
centered region in the Southern Great Plain is 
higher by 3.8 times and its population number is 
larger by 2.5 times than the Gy6r-centered region 
in Northern Transdanubia. These differences are 
the consequences of circumscribing regions--which 
represent professional-hospitalization regions-- 
along county borders even though medical considera-
tions would have required totally different re-
gionalization /e.g., in case of accessibility to 
emergency care/. 
Another characteristic feature of hospital 
structure is centralization, manifest in the pre-
dominance of large hospitals with the deformation 
of low level hospital structure. Of all the hospi-
tals, 45 percent /including maternity homes with 
20-30 beds/ have more than 500 hospital beds; 23 
percent have as many as 800 beds, and only 17 per-
cent have fewerthan 200 beds. As regards  general 
hospitals, the average capacity at the regional 
level amounts to 1,690 beds, in county hospitals 
1,095 beds, while in local hospitals 407 beds in 
1984. Evidently, the capacity of hospitals of both 
medium and local level is much higher than pre-
dicted by the theoretical model. Nevertheless, it 
exceeds by several times the size of general hos- 

▪ 
Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial   
• 
processes of  ▪  
public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
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Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
186 
pitals of developed countries. For example, in the 
early 1980s, in Belgium the average hospital bed 
number in general hospitalsx was 187; in Finland: 
136; in the Netherlands: 225; in Denmark: 289; 
while in Hungary: 562. Table 1 illustrates in de-
tail the differences among hospital structures in 
Hungary and Finland, highlighting the low level 
hospital structure in Hungary. 
In Finland, local level small hospitals 
play a very important role in health care, especial-
ly for the aged. Not only are they situated near to 
the residence and family of old patients, they are 
rather efficient hospitals because the supply of 
patients requiring simple health care costs much 
less than the maintenance of expensive hospital 
beds for acute diseases. 
Deformation /lack/ of low level hospital 
structure in Hungary shows significant regional 
differences  /Fig. 2/. 
 In Northern Transdanubia, 
besides large hospitals a relatively dense network 
of medium-sized and small hospitals has been estab-
lished. For example, on the territory of 9,600 kne 
of Komarom, Gyor-Sopron, and Vas Counties, 14 set-
tlements have hospitals. An absolutely diverse 
hospital structure is characteristic of the Great 
Plain, where small hospitals are extremely rare. 
Despite the territory of 11,800 kne of Bekes and 
Hajdu-Bihar Counties, there are only  5  settlements 
that have hospitals. In such a way, the extent of 
Besides general hospitals, there are special hos-
pitals as well, e.g., mental hospitals and T. B. 
sanatoriums. These hospitals and mental beds of 
general hospitals were not considered in calcula-
tions to allow comparison. 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
18 7 

 
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Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
1 88 
the catchment areas of a number of hospitals in 
the Great Plain is larger by 2-3 times both in 
size and in population number than that of minor 
hospitals in Transdanubia. 
These differences, following largely from 
inadequate transport and communication facilities, 
influence significantly accessibility to primary 
health care. These differences have deep historical 
roots, reflecting the characteristics of regional 
distribution of public hospitals in pre-war Hungary. 
Indeed, between the two world wars even larger set-
tlements could not establish hospitals as a con-
sequence of their undeveloped economy and the back-
ward approach of municipalities. Since peasants 
were excluded from health insurance, there was a 
lower level of demand than in the other, more in-
dustrialized regions. Besides the public hospital 
network, private hospitals also functioned to 
'compensate' somewhat for these regional differen-
ces /for the rich only/ as private hospitals have 
functioned in a significantly greater number in 
the Great Plain than in Transdanubia. This part 
of the hospital structure was abolished after World 
War 
Low level autonomy of health care administra-
tion 
In most countries, regional management of 
public health is closely connected to regional 
organization of state administration. This de-
pendence, however, exhibits great variety. The 
point is that there should exist a relative separa-
tion /autonomy/ of health care administration: 
1. in connection to public administrative 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
1 89 
bodies; 
2. in planning-financing mechanisms; 
3. in the relationship of board of councils 
that represent residents. 
At present, health administration is strong-
ly subject to council administration; the separa-
tion and local social control can be realized to 
such a minor extent that it is almost impossible 
for public health to make plans for coordinated  
development of a region considering both compre-
hensive professional aspects and the connections 
between settlements. The subordination of public 
health administration is well-featured in the dis-
integration between regional systems of health 
planning and financing and regional systems of pub-
lic health functioning. The regional units of the 
latter are formed by the catchment areas of town 
hospitals /i.e., a given town plus rural settlements 
designated on a hospital referral order/. These 
catchment areas do not appear in health planning- 
financing or informational-statistical systems of 
public health as regional units. Health administra-
tion, and consequently planning and financing, 
follow the council hierarchy, which in turn is 
linked to the regional distribution of state admin-
istration. 
The separation of these two regional systems 
can be better illustrated through examples. Plans 
and expenditure of public health in rural settle-
ments are coordinated and supervised by the council 
of a designated centre in state administration. It 
frequently happens /e.g., in a lack of a hospital 
in a town/ that the professional management of 
primary health care in a village is performed by 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
1 9 0 
the hospital of another town. Evidently, neither 
the town hospital nor the town council can under-
take the task of becoming 'host' in public health 
care of a catchment area. Another contradiction 
is that general practitioners in villages are em-
ployed by local councils, while at the same time 
they are professionally supervised by a chief 
medical officer of a hospital respectively.  A 
town hospital is expected to provide patients of 
the catchment area, too; but in reality it is just 
the 'hospital of the town' because rural settlements 
do not contribute to the maintenance and development 
of town hospitals; nor are their interests repre-
sented in decision making for town hospitals. 
Data from County Statistical Yearbooks prove 
explicitly the consequences of disregarding actual 
regional units because when determining the index 
of 'hospital beds per 10,000 inhabitants', the 
number of hospital beds is divided by population 
number of the town only. If we calculate the en-
tire population of a catchment area of a hospital 
/including the inhabitants of villages/, the in-
dices and sequences for health care would be en-
tirely different. As an example: in Kalocsa /1980/ 
the number of hospital beds per 10,000 inhabitants 
amounted to 206; while is Kiskunhalas: 234 /Data 
of Statistical Yearbooks of Counties/. If making 
calculations by the real catchment area, the num-
bers would be  88  in Kalocsa and 56 in Kiskunhalas. 
The realization of the purpose of regionali-
zation is limited by financing, which appears in 
two ways. On the one hand, in the distribution 
mechanisms of regional development resources, pub-
lic health does not have the separation required 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
191 
either on the county or local level, which is a 
consequence of the above mentioned administration 
dependence. This partly explains why public health 
is unable to represent the interests of either the 
whole public health or of particular fields, like 
primary health care, hospital care, and prevention. 
On the other hand, scarcity of financial means 
necessitates that in many cases diseases are cured 
on the regional level instead of the county /medium/ 
level and, similarly, county level provides tasks 
that could be solved in local hospitals. It would 
naturally require appropriate health technology in 
the local hospitals, too. 
Self—government of health administration 
could possibly be realized by establishing an organi—
zation system of independent local /and county/ 
health offices that would belong to councils of 
settlements /and county councils/ only while having 
coordinated relations with council administration. 
2. Major processes of regional inequalities in 
public health care  
The main components of multidimensional re—
gional inequalities of public health are as follows: 
1. Regional differences in the state of 
health, rate of mortality of the population; 
2. Regional inequalities of health facility 
supply /supply of doctors, hospitals, etc./; 
3. Regional differences of utilization of, 
and accessibility to, health care. 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
192 
State of health and health supply 
Traditionally, health planning and statis-
tical analyzes examine regional differences in the 
supply of doctors and hospitals by comparing data 
of the individual counties with the national 
average. This approach seems less and less suitable 
to reveal basic tensions in regional differences. 
A cardinal aspect of evaluating the regional distri-
bution of doctors, hospitals, and health services 
should be the regional structure of needs. The state 
of health of the population is not yet widely known. 
An approximative, "rough" index of this could be the 
rate of standardized mortality, which is much de-
bated but used widely in the international litera-
ture  /Haynes 1985/. 
When comparing the state of health and re-
gional differencesx of supply of health services, 
certain parts of counties show a better state of 
health and better supply of doctors and hospitals 
than the national average; these advantages can 
strengthen each other. In other counties--e.g., 
in Bacs-Kiskun, Szabolcs-Szatmar, Pest--the state 
of health is below the national mean value, ac-
companied by unfavourable supply resulting in ac-
cumulating disadvantages. 
Fig.  3 
 demonstrates the state of health by using 
rate of standardized mortality, supply of health 
institutions, and indices of number of doctors 
and hospital beds per 10,000 inhabitants. The 
order of counties is based on rate of standardized 
mortality. As the lowest value for rate of mortal-
ity is the most favourable, reciprocals of actual 
values were applied in the representation. Thus, 
for all three indices, values over 100 percent 
are favourable. These data show relative values 
against the national mean. 

 
 
 
Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
193 
iStandardized /PhYsici"s 
mortality # 
Budapest 
213 
17 8 
3:339EEM:EEE:
Bekes 
Hospital beds 
Csongred 
161 
+++++++++++++f  
MIN 
Gyor-Sopron 
Nograd 
Hajdu-Bihar 
1111111111 
  30 
1+++++  
OIMM 
Heves 
++++++++++++++++++++137  
Vas 
Szolnok 
Veszprem 
Zala 
Borsod-Abauj-Zemplen 
lna 

Bcies-K1sktrt 
tti_t 
Fejer 
EEEEEE=. 
Pest 
60 
5ZZIZZZILUZZICZNOCZ 
Szabolcs-Szatskir 
Baranya 
60 
++++++++++++++I 
1111MMI___1 
Fanarcin 
++++j-ii 
Somog y 
70 
80 
90 
100 
110 
120 
1130 
county average.100 
FIGURE 3 State of health and health supply (Relative 
value of standardized mortality rates 
(1982-84), number of doctors, and hospital 
beds per 10,000 inhabitants /1984/ 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
194 
For proper interpretation of Figure  3,  it should 
be stressed that inadequate health supply consti-
tutes only one, even a secondary, reason for the 
unfavourable state of the health of the popula-
tion, priority being given to socio-economic cir-
cumstances. Undoubtedly, regions having an un- 
favourable state of health of the population should 
be afforded a larger proportion of resources during 
distribution of financial resources of public 
health. By such a strategy of health policy, the 
effects of other, non-health factors could at least 
partly be compensated for. Figure  3  calls attention 
mainly to the fact that inadequate financial means 
and inefficient mechanisms of health policy in ef-
fect over the last decades could be an obstacle to 
realizing the desired distribution. 
In the health-sociological literature, by 
'inverse care law' is meant a phenomenon whereby 
lower social strata having unfavourable states of 
health use health care to a much lesser extent than 
upper social strata having better states of health 
/Hart  1975;  Stacey  1977/.  My calculations presented 
earlier can prove that the 'inverse care law' is 
also valid for regional processes in Hungary. 
Diversified development of backward regions 
In 1960, considering the supply of doctors, 
hospital beds, as well as health expenditure per 
capita of counties, two backward regions could be 
distinguished in Hungary: one of them was situated 
in the south-western part of Hungary including 
three counties /Zala, Somogy, Tolna/; the other 
was in the middle and eastern part of the country 
involving five counties /Bacs-Kiskun,  B4k4s, Pest, 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
195 
Szabolcs-SzatmAr, Szolnok/  /Fig.  4/. 
 By 1980, only 
the counties of the south-western region could 
achieve the national average; while the eastern 
region was able to improve its relative position 
only to a small extent and retains its worst status. 
This backwardness was maintained in spite of a cer-
tain leveling of differences between 1960-1980 con-
cerning on the one hand the national average and, 
on the other, values of counties having the best 
supply /especially in the case of hospital beds 
per 10,000 inhabitants/. 
Meeting new demands and regional differences 
My investigations of the health supply of 
counties under most unfavourable circumstances aimed 
first of all at whether this leveling process-- 
which can be characterized by complex indices of 
supply--served to meet new demands. The structure 
of social needs for health supply was undergoing 
significant transformation during the last decades. 
/E.g., there is a radical change in the structure 
of diseases, an increase in the rate of cardiovas-
cular, mental, and those diseases occurring in old 
age./ 
x . 
Data in Table 2 Illustrate that the struc- 
ture of health care infrastructure of counties of 
most unfavourable characteristics was less able to 
In Table 2, this 'leveling' process is charac-
terized by complex indices such as the number of 
working hours of polyclinics per 10,000 inhabi-
tants plus the number of hospital beds per 10,000 
inhabitants. In these terms, the values of rela-
tive indices of backward counties are much higher 
than in the case of meeting new demands. 

• 
Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in 

Hungary. In: Spatial Organization  • 
and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
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Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
1 97 
meet changing needs than that of counties having 
a more favourable supply though still below na-
tional mean values. To put it in another way: 
during the last decades, the leveling processes 
that acted to diminish the extent of backwardness 
existing in previous periods were unable to meet 
new demands to the extent necessary. It means that 
meeting new demands is accompanied by significant 
regional inequalities at the expense of counties 
having more unfavourable supply. 
Uneven decrease of regional differences in 
the supply of doctors and hospitals 
During the last few decades, the number of 
doctors increased to a much greater extent than 
that of hospital beds. /Between 1960 and 1982, the 
number of doctors increased by 72 %, while that of 
hospital beds grew just by 28 % per 10,000 inhabi-
tants./ Despite the enormous increase in the number 
of doctors, regional differences in the supply of 
doctors diminished to a lesser extent than was 
possible and necessary. Even a contrary tendency 
can be noticed in the formation of regional dif-
ferences: there was a much smaller decrease in re-
gional differences in the supply of doctors than 
hospital beds /Table 3/. One reason can be seen in 
the deficiency of the means of central health 
managementAfter development resources were cen-
tralized, constructing hospitals in undeveloped 
regions of low level health services was a relati-
vely easier task; however, central health authori,- 
ties did not have effective incentives to influ-
ence the decision making of doctors in selecting 
settlements in the long run. 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
198 
The data presented in Table  3  show that the 
most critical point of regional differences are 
the inequalities in the supply of specialists. If 
the special fields of medicine are examined, there 
are manifold differences in the supply of doctors 
and hospital beds alike. E.g., in 1984 in Heves 
County, which can be regarded as the best supplied 
vith emergency treatment, the number of beds was 
5.2 times higher per 10,000 inhabitants than in 
Bekes and Szabolcs-SzatmAr Counties, which have 
relatively the least emergency treatment beds. 
Accessibility to health services in Bacs-
Kiskun County serving as an example 
Among the main components of health inequali-
ties, the third one is meant by regional differences 
of utilization of and accessibility to health ser-
vices. Accessibility is a complex phenomenon com-
prised of distances between settlements, costs of 
services and travel, information services, con-
nections of doctors and patients, tradition of 
doctor use, etc. To evaluate regional inequalities 
of accessibility requires empirical examinations 
to be made at the settlement level by different 
health services. There is no comprehensive informa-
tion on regional differences in accessibility to 
health care for the whole country. Information- 
statistical systems of public health do not pro-
vide the required data to carry out such investiga-
tions; on the other hand, health policy and plan-
ning does not demand examinations of such a nature. 
In the investigations in health care of 
rural settlements of Bacs-Kiskun County, the tran-
sport and settlement characteristics of accessibi- 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
199 
lity to out-patient clinics were examined /Fig. 5/. 
As a result of examinations for distances between 
rural settlements and seats of polyclinics, it can 
be stated that out of 105 villages 49 were situat-
ed within a distance of 20 kms to a polyclinic. 
These settlements contain  53 %  of the rural popu-
lation of the county. In numerous instances, even 
longer distances, up to 60 kms, must be overcome. 
Population in 23 rural settlements /17.4 % of the 
rural population/ have difficulties in accessing 
polyclinics not only because of long distances 
but also because of the low-frequency of transport. 
In my paper, efforts were made to present 
briefly the characteristics of the regional struc-
ture of public health in Hungary, as well as in 
delineating four main processes of changing region-
al differences concerning the following: 
- state of health and contrasted regional 
distribution of health manpower and facilities; 
- diversified development of backward coun-
ties in the leveling process; 
- contradictions between meeting new social 
needs and the formation of regional differences; 
_ finally, the uneven decrease of regional 
differences in the supply of doctors and hospitals, 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
200 

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1. rural settlements without easy access and having 
indirect means of transport; 
2: rural settlements laying in long distances  and  ha-
ving  lowfrequency of transport; 
3. rural settlements without easy access; 
4. rural settlements having indirect means of transport; 
5. rural settlements having low frequency of transport; 
6. out-patiemt clinics; 
7. boundary of catchment areas of out-patient clinics 
FIGURE 5 Rural settlements having unfavourable 
transport facilities in terms of accessi-
bility to out-patient clinics in BAcs-Kiskun 
County, 1983 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
201 
References 
AJKAI, Z.  et al, /1981/ A progressziv betegellAtas 
regionAlis szintjeinek kialakitAsa /The es-
tablishment of regional levels of progres-
sive patient care/. In: Nepegeszsegflaz 52, 
3.  pp. 129-138. 
HART, J. T. /1975/ The Inverse Care Law. In: COX,G. 
- HEAD, A. /eds/: A Sociology of Medical  
Practice, Macmillan 
HAYNES, R. /1985/ Regional Anomalies in Hospital 
Bed Use in England and Wales. In: Regional  
Studies, Vol. 19. 1. pp. 19-27. 
HAYNES, R. - BENTHAM, C. G. /1982/ The Effects of 
Accessibility on General Practitioner Con-
sultations, Out-Patient Attendances and In-
Patient Admissions in Norfolk, England. 
In: Social Science and Medicine, Vol. 16. 
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HOWE, G. M. - PHILLIPS, D. R. /1983/ Medical Ge-
ography in the United Kingdom, 1945-1982. 
In: McGLASHAN, N. D. - BLUNDEN, J. R. /eds/: 
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KNOX, P. L, /1979/ The Accessibility of Primary 
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MAYER, J. D. /1982/ Relations between two Traditions 
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Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
202 
onosz, P,  /1985/ Az  egeszsegfigyi  infrastruktura  
terilleti egyenlOtlensegeinek vizsgAlata  
/An Investigation of regional inequalities 
of health infrastructure/, A RegionAlis Ku-
tatAsok KOzpontjAnak Kutat6si Eredmenyei, 
1. MTA RKK, Pecs. 
PYLE, G. F. /1976/ Introduction: Foundations to 
Medical Geography, In: Economic Geography, 
Vol. 52. 2. pp. 95-102. 
PYLE, G. F. /1979/ Applied Medical Geography. V. M. 
Winston and Sons, Washington, D. C. 
PYLE, G. F. /1983/ Three Decades of Medical Ge-
ography in the United States. In: McGlashan, 
N. D. - Blunden, J. R. /eds/: op. cit.  
ROEMER, M. 
/1977/ Comparative National Policies  
on Health Care. Marcel Dekker, INC. New 
York. 
ROEMER, M. I. /1979/ Regionalized Health Systems 
in Five Nations. In: Hospitals, December 
16.  pp. 72-82. 
ROSENBERG, M. W. /1983/ Accessibility to Health 
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78-88. 
SCHOLTZ, K. /1942/ MagyarorszAg korh6zai  es mAs  
gyOgyintezetei az 1940.  evben. 
 /Hospitals 
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dapest. 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
2 03 
STACEY, M. /1977/ People who are Affected by the 
inverse Law of Care. In:  Health and Social  
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 87, pp. 898-902. 
TOWNSEND, P. - DAVIDSON, N. /1982/  Inequalities in  
Health: The Black Report. 
 Penguin. 

Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
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Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes of public health care in Hungary. In: Spatial Organization and Regional Development. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
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Orosz, Éva: Regional structure and major spatial processes  • 
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Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1988. 180–206. p. Discussion Papers, Spatial Organization and Regional Development 
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