Due time driven surgery scheduling
Samudra, Michael ; Demeulemeester, Erik ; Cardoen, Brecht ; Vansteenkiste, N. ; Rademakers, Frank
Samudra, Michael
Demeulemeester, Erik
Cardoen, Brecht
Vansteenkiste, N.
Rademakers, Frank
Citations
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Publication Type
Journal article with impact factor
Editor
Supervisor
Publication Year
2017
Journal
Health Care Management Science
Book
Publication Volume
20
Publication Issue
3
Publication Begin page
326
Publication End page
352
Publication NUmber of pages
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Abstract
In many hospitals there are patients who receive surgery later than what is medically indicated. In one of Europe's largest hospitals, the University Hospital Leuven, this is the case for approximately every third patient. Serving patients late cannot always be avoided as a highly utilized OR department will sometimes suffer capacity shortage, occasionally leading to unavoidable delays in patient care. Nevertheless, serving patients late is a problem as it exposes them to an increased health risk and hence should be avoided whenever possible. In order to improve the current situation, the delay in patient scheduling had to be quantified and the responsible mechanism, the scheduling process, had to be better understood. Drawing from this understanding, we implemented and tested realistic patient scheduling methods in a discrete event simulation model. We found that it is important to model non-elective arrivals and to include elective rescheduling decisions made on surgery day itself. Rescheduling ensures that OR related performance measures, such as overtime, will only loosely depend on the chosen patient scheduling method. We also found that capacity considerations should guide actions performed before the surgery day such as patient scheduling and patient replanning. This is the case as those scheduling strategies that ensure that OR capacity is efficiently used will also result in a high number of patients served within their medically indicated time limit. An efficient use of OR capacity can be achieved, for instance, by serving patients first come, first served. As applying first come, first served might not always be possible in a real setting, we found it is important to allow for patient replanning.