Managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation
Long waiting times in emergency departments (EDs) not only reduce patients’ perceived quality of care, but also increase crowding which can adversely affect patients’ outcomes. Waiting time has been found to affect patients’ outcomes and is closely associated with delays in the provision of ancillar...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-59442018-07-10T05:46:31Z Managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation YANG, Kum Khiong LAM, Sean Shao Wei LOW, Joyce M. W. ONG, Marcus Eng Hock Long waiting times in emergency departments (EDs) not only reduce patients’ perceived quality of care, but also increase crowding which can adversely affect patients’ outcomes. Waiting time has been found to affect patients’ outcomes and is closely associated with delays in the provision of ancillary services to ED patients by the diagnostic/treatment laboratories. The focus of this study is to improve the flow of ED patients by testing alternative triage processes and capacity of physicians, triage nurses and laboratories. Three alternative triage processes are examined for managing the flow of ED patients through shared and dedicated laboratories across different utilization of physicians, triage nurses, and laboratories using a discrete event simulation (DES) model that captures the pertinent characteristics of EDs operating in tertiary acute care hospitals under conservative assumptions. Our results show that choosing the appropriate triage process and adding extra capacity to the triage and dedicated laboratory can significantly improve ED performance, especially when physician utilization is high. In contrast, adding extra capacity to a shared laboratory improves performance only slightly. Our results also show that shared laboratory generally provides better support to EDs than dedicated laboratory. 2016-09-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4945 info:doi/10.1016/j.orhc.2016.05.001 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/5944/viewcontent/ManagingEmergencyDepartmentCrowding_2016_afv.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Emergency department Triaging Healthcare quality improvement Simulation Medicine and Health Sciences Operations and Supply Chain Management |
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Emergency department Triaging Healthcare quality improvement Simulation Medicine and Health Sciences Operations and Supply Chain Management YANG, Kum Khiong LAM, Sean Shao Wei LOW, Joyce M. W. ONG, Marcus Eng Hock Managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation |
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Long waiting times in emergency departments (EDs) not only reduce patients’ perceived quality of care, but also increase crowding which can adversely affect patients’ outcomes. Waiting time has been found to affect patients’ outcomes and is closely associated with delays in the provision of ancillary services to ED patients by the diagnostic/treatment laboratories. The focus of this study is to improve the flow of ED patients by testing alternative triage processes and capacity of physicians, triage nurses and laboratories. Three alternative triage processes are examined for managing the flow of ED patients through shared and dedicated laboratories across different utilization of physicians, triage nurses, and laboratories using a discrete event simulation (DES) model that captures the pertinent characteristics of EDs operating in tertiary acute care hospitals under conservative assumptions. Our results show that choosing the appropriate triage process and adding extra capacity to the triage and dedicated laboratory can significantly improve ED performance, especially when physician utilization is high. In contrast, adding extra capacity to a shared laboratory improves performance only slightly. Our results also show that shared laboratory generally provides better support to EDs than dedicated laboratory. |
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YANG, Kum Khiong LAM, Sean Shao Wei LOW, Joyce M. W. ONG, Marcus Eng Hock |
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YANG, Kum Khiong LAM, Sean Shao Wei LOW, Joyce M. W. ONG, Marcus Eng Hock |
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YANG, Kum Khiong |
title |
Managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation |
title_short |
Managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation |
title_full |
Managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation |
title_fullStr |
Managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation |
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Managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation |
title_sort |
managing emergency department crowding through improved triaging and resource allocation |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2016 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4945 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/5944/viewcontent/ManagingEmergencyDepartmentCrowding_2016_afv.pdf |
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