Needy boarding patients in emergency departments: defining a control policy for the physicians
Kim De Boeck,
Raïsa Carmen and
Nico Vandaele
No 613808, Working Papers of Department of Decision Sciences and Information Management, Leuven from KU Leuven, Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB), Department of Decision Sciences and Information Management, Leuven
Abstract:
Boarding patients and the extra workload they introduce are a major concern in emergency departments. Not in the least because they confront the physicians with a challenging task: prioritizing between boarding patients and patients currently under treatment in the emergency department. The main contribution of this paper is the examination of different control policies for the physicians when needy boarding patients are added to the analysis. Using discrete-event simulation, three static control policies (first-come, first-served and always prioritizing either boarding patients or the other patients) and two dynamic control policies (using threshold values and accumulating priorities) are studied. For operational system performance, the recommended control policy is simple and straightforward: never prioritize boarding patients. However, in an emergency department setting, health-related performance measures also need to be considered: physicians cannot disadvantage one type of patients in favour of operational system performance. The result is a trade-off between operational system performance measures and health-related performance measures. Furthermore, we conclude that applying a first-come, first-served policy performs extremely well in a wide range of situations.
Keywords: OR in health services; Decision support for practice; Simulation; Needy boarding patients; Prioritization (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2018-02
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Published in FEB Research Report KBI_1803
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ete:kbiper:613808
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