“…This study is intended to improve information on the local healthcare ecosystem, defined as a network of interrelated sub-systems such as natural and socioeconomic contexts, providers, organisations, health suppliers, regulations and consumers in a specific region (Serbanati et al, 2011). Comparison across jurisdictions and countries using the same method, terminology and tools (Chung et al, 2018; Gutiérrez-Colosía et al, 2019; Sadeniemi et al, 2018; Salinas-Perez et al, 2018) has favoured the modelling of local efficiency and resource allocation tailored to the particular needs of every area in urban planning (García-Alonso et al, 2019). In future, the extension of comparative research on local patterns of service delivery and resource utilisation in rural areas should facilitate the development of specific models of rural mental health care, replace the traditional ‘ one size fits all ’ approach to rural health by tailored local planning and enable a better analysis of factors related to geographical accessibility such as out-of-pocket costs of transportation, equity of access, the impact of distance on help-seeking behaviour, and social adherence and fragmentation.…”