Accumulating priority queues versus pure priority queues for managing patients in emergency departments

Publication date: Available online 25 October 2019Source: Operations Research for Health CareAuthor(s): Marta Cildoz, Amaia Ibarra, Fermin MallorAbstractImproving the quality of healthcare in emergency departments (EDs) is at the forefront of many hospital managers’ efforts, as they strive to plan and implement better patient flow strategies. In this paper, a new approach to manage the patient flow in EDs after triage is proposed. The new queue discipline, named accumulative priority queue with finite horizon and denoted by APQ-h, is an extension of the accumulative priority queue (APQ) discipline that considers not only the acuity level of patients and their waiting time but also the stage of the healthcare treatment. APQ disciplines have been studied in the literature from a queuing theory point of view, which requires assumptions rarely found in real EDs, such as homogeneity in the patient arrival pattern and only one service stage. The APQ-h discipline accumulates priority from the point of waiting for the first physician consultation until the moment the waiting time exceeds the upper time limit set to access the physician after the patient’s arrival. A recent study shows that a management strategy of this type is applied in practice in several Canadian EDs. The main aim of this paper is to explore the implementation of APQ-h managing policies in a real ED. For this purpose, a simulation model replicating a real ED is developed. This simulation model is also used to ...
Source: Operations Research for Health Care - Category: Hospital Management Source Type: research