Publication | Closed Access
Dynamic Patient Scheduling for Multi‐Appointment Health Care Programs
69
Citations
51
References
2017
Year
EngineeringBariatric Surgery ProgramScheduling PracticesSurgeryHealth Care ManagementOperations ResearchDynamic Patient SchedulingHealth Services ResearchClinical Decision SupportDecision Support SystemsScheduling (Computing)Markov Decision ProcessInteger ProgrammingHealth Care DeliveryScheduling AnalysisNursingScheduling ProblemHealth Care ReimbursementPatient SafetyScheduling (Operating Systems)Scheduling (Production Processes)Patient ManagementMedicineScheduling (Project Management)Emergency Medicine
We investigate the scheduling practices of a multidisciplinary, multistage, outpatient health care program. Patients undergo a series of assessments before being eligible for elective surgery. Such systems often suffer from high rates of attrition and appointment no‐shows leading to capacity underutilization and treatment delays. We propose a new scheduling model where the clinic assigns patients to an appointment day but postpones the decision of which assessments patients undergo pending the observation of who arrives. In doing so, the clinic gains flexibility to improve system performance. We formulate the scheduling problem as a Markov decision process and use approximate dynamic programming to solve it. We apply our approach to a dataset collected from a bariatric surgery program at a large tertiary hospital in Toronto, Canada. We examine the quality of our solutions via structural results and compare them with heuristic scheduling practices using a discrete‐event simulation. By allowing multiple assessments, delaying their scheduling, and by optimizing over an appointment book, we show significant improvements in patient throughput, clinic profit, use of overtime, and staff utilization.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1