8 October, 2019
The analytical company Marketing Logic has prepared a report on the availability of a list of the most important services for Russian residents in different regions of the country. The list is made up of institutions that the average citizen needs on a regular basis. This release shows the availability of clinics and pharmacies.
Using Big Data, which includes information about the number of residents, companies and enterprises of various profiles, public institutions, as well as geodata, experts analyzed information about the average distance for an urban resident in the regions of Russia to points of provision of various services: from clinics to theaters. The data included in this release relates to pharmacies and clinics.
"We continue to publish a series of data on the availability of social infrastructure facilities that are important for every citizen and citizen. There is no need to further emphasize the importance of clinics and pharmacies, so we simply provide data without their interpretation, which can be given with greater expertise by the medical and pharmaceutical communities. What we certainly see is the heterogeneity of coverage by the network of polyclinic care in different regions of the country, with pharmacies the situation is more even, because these are mainly commercial structures, and they occupy a market niche where it is possible and there is demand"-says Dmitry Galkin, managing partner of Marketing Logic and an expert in the field of Big Data and geomarketing
Pharmacies are most accessible to citizens in the North Caucasus (99.2%), Volga (97%) and Siberian (96.9%) Federal districts (the percentage of urban residents living no further than 1 km from the nearest pharmacy is indicated), followed by the southern Federal district (96.7%). With the result of 96.5% - the Central FO. In the North-West -96.4%, in the Urals-96.3%, in the far East-95.5%.
The Top 20. Pharmacies are most accessible (up to 1 km) to residents of the Republic of Adygea (99.9%), residents of Moscow (99.5%), residents of the Stavropol territory (99.2%), the Republic of Chuvashia (99%), Ulyanovsk (98.9%), Tomsk (98.7%) regions, residents of St. Petersburg (98.7%), the Republic of Tatarstan (98.6%), Kursk (98.6%), Irkutsk (98.5%), Murmansk (98.4%), Omsk (98.3%), Voronezh (98.2%), Kostroma (98.2%), Novgorod (98.1%) regions, Zabaykalsky (97.9%), Perm (97.9%) territories, Smolensk region (97.8%), KhMAO-Yugra (97.8%), Kaliningrad region (97.7%).
The Top 20. The largest share of urban residents living at a distance of more than 1 km from the nearest pharmacy is in the Kurgan region (8.1%), Kamchatka territory (7.7%), Komi Republic (7.1%), Tver (6.2%), Vladimir (6%) regions, Udmurt Republic (5.8%), Belgorod (5.5%), Lipetsk (5.4%), Yaroslavl (5.3%), Arkhangelsk (5.2%) regions, Primorye territory (5%), Magadan (5%), Tula (5%) regions, the Republic of Buryatia (4.8%), Astrakhan (4.8%), Sakhalin (4.8%), Kemerovo (4.7%) regions, the Republic of Mari El (4.6%), Rostov (4.3%) and Sverdlovsk (4.3%) regions.
The percentage of urban residents who live within 5 to 10 km of a pharmacy does not exceed 0.3% on average in the country, from 2 to 5 km – 1.2%, from 1 to 2 km – 1.9%.
Polyclinics are most accessible to citizens in the North-Western (81.6%), southern (76%), Siberian (75.8%), Ural (75.8%) Federal districts (the percentage of residents living no further than 1 km from the nearest polyclinic is indicated), followed by the far Eastern (75.3%), Central (73.4%), Volga (71.7%), North Caucasus (70.7%) Federal districts.
The Top 20. Polyclinics are most accessible (up to 1 km) to residents of the Republic of Adygea (93%), Pskov region (91.4%), St. Petersburg (89.9%), Murmansk (88.6%), Magadan (88.4%) Vologda (87.4%) regions, the Republic of Mordovia (86.9%), Moscow (86.6%), Omsk (86.5%) and Kirov (85.9%), Tver (85%) regions, the Republic of Buryatia (85%), Amur region (84.6%), KhMAO-Yugra (84%), Saratov region (83.6%), Republic of Chuvashia (83.2%), Samara (83.1%), Voronezh (81.9%), Tyumen (81.6%), Ryazan (81.6) regions.
The Top 20. The largest share of urban residents living more than 1 km from the nearest clinic is in the Ulyanovsk region (48.4%), Kamchatka (43.4%), Perm (41.8%), Oryol (38.9%), Kursk (37.2%) regions, the Republic of Khakassia (37.1%), Kaluga (35.5%), Yaroslavl (34.8%) regions, Udmurt Republic (34.8%), Sverdlovsk (34.7%), Vladimir (34.2%) regions, Khabarovsk territory (34.1%), Novgorod (33.9%), Irkutsk (32.8%) regions, the Republic of Tatarstan (32.7%), Nizhny Novgorod (31.9%), Lipetsk (31.6%), Bryansk (31.4%), Penza (31.3%), Belgorod (31%) regions.
The percentage of urban residents living at a distance of 5 to 10 km from the clinic does not exceed 1.1% on average in the country, from 2 to 5 km – 5.4%, from 1 to 2 km – 18.2%.