Unsupervised neural networks for clustering emergent patient flows

Publication date: Available online 26 August 2017 Source:Operations Research for Health Care Author(s): Marina Resta, Michele Sonnessa, Elena Tànfani, Angela Testi In recent years, hospitals increasingly faced with a growing proportion of their inpatient admissions coming from the fluctuating demand of emergency admissions. The opportunity to move emergency patients, with a decision to admit, out of an Emergency Department (ED) is linked to the ability of the hospital to actually receive them. Indeed, the growing concern on public budget constraints implies reducing the number of inpatient ward beds making crucial to improve the bed capacity planning. The attention must be focused on avoiding system bottlenecks such as the boarding in the ED of emergent patients waiting to be admitted into inpatient hospital wards. Bed management is considered a critical function in managing bed capacity and smoothing elective and emergent patient flows. In order to support the bed management function the clustering and previsional analysis of patient flows data are needed. In this work, we use an unsupervised neural network technique, namely Self Organizing Maps (SOMs), to explore input data and to extract significant patterns. A large quantity of data records has been collected over a yearly period to obtain information related to the arrivals of emergent patients in a medium-sized ED located in the city of Genova. The aim of the paper is twofold. Our first goal is to develop a new f...
Source: Operations Research for Health Care - Category: Hospital Management Source Type: research