The percentage values along the yes
path (in larger font) are relative to the total (100 %) of individuals living with the condition, representing how many make it through from the total population. In contrast, the percentages along the blocked no
path reflect the percentage of loss at each barrier, serving as a measure of the relative barrier size to identify promising targets.
In this example at each barrier 50% are lost.
What is the biggest barrier for individuals living with migraine in receiving proper care? The surprising an- swer is to get a diagnosis.
Three out of four individuals living with chronic migraine (CM) and who consult a physician fail to receive a correct CM diagnosis.
An laternative Access-to-Care (ATC) framework1 offers a way to generalize this in-app approach into a broader platform approach, starting with healthcare needs and progressing through a five-step process that addresses both patient and provider challenges (see Fig. ).
Levesque, J. F., Harris, M. F., & Russell, G. (2013). Patient-centred access to health care: conceptualising access at the interface of health systems and populations. International journal for equity in health, 12, 1-9.↩︎