Publication | Open Access
The Impact of Inpatient Boarding on ED Efficiency: A Discrete-Event Simulation Study
85
Citations
37
References
2009
Year
Emergency Department AdministrationEmergency CareHospital MedicinePrimary CarePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchInpatient BoardingHealth PolicyEd EfficiencyOutcomes ResearchNedocs ScoreEmergency DepartmentHealth Care DeliveryNursingHospital EnvironmentPatient SafetyDiscrete-event Simulation StudyEmergency Medical ServiceOut-of-hospital Emergency Medical ServiceMedicineEmergency Medicine
In this study, a discrete-event simulation approach was used to model Emergency Department's (ED) patient flow to investigate the effect of inpatient boarding on the ED efficiency in terms of the National Emergency Department Crowding Scale (NEDOCS) score and the rate of patients who leave without being seen (LWBS). The decision variable in this model was the boarder-released-ratio defined as the ratio of admitted patients whose boarding time is zero to all admitted patients. Our analysis shows that the Overcrowded(+) (a NEDOCS score over 100) ratio decreased from 88.4% to 50.4%, and the rate of LWBS patients decreased from 10.8% to 8.4% when the boarder-released-ratio changed from 0% to 100%. These results show that inpatient boarding significantly impacts both the NEDOCS score and the rate of LWBS patient and this analysis provides a quantification of the impact of boarding on emergency department patient crowding.
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