Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Boxes
- Contributors
- Introduction and Overview
- 1 Overview of Performance Analytics for Healthcare with Examples in R
- 2 Cost-Effectiveness Analysis for Healthcare: From Theory to Practice to Problems and Solutions
- 3 Capabilities, QALYs, and COVID
- 4 The Economic Efficiency of Policies to Reduce Ill Health Involving Environmental Factors
- 5 Health in the National Accounts
- 6 Healthcare as Social Infrastructure: Productivity and the UK National Health Service During and After COVID-19
- 7 Health, Human Capital, and Its Contribution to Economic Growth
- 8 What Do We Know from the Vast Literature on Efficiency and Productivity in Healthcare? A Review and Bibliometric Analysis
- 9 Brief Overview of Production Theory for Analyzing Healthcare Performance
- 10 Modeling Production of Well-Being from an Intermediate Medical Intervention: With an Empirical Demonstration
- 11 Data Envelopment Analysis Applications and US Hospital Policy
- 12 New Tools for Evaluating the Performance of Healthcare Providers Using DEA and FDH Estimators
- 13 Stochastic Frontier Analysis for Healthcare, with Illustrations in R
- 14 A Review of US Stochastic Frontier Studies of Hospital Efficiency Published After 2008
- 15 A Nonparametric Journey through Conditional Frontier Models
- 16 Measuring Health and Healthcare Efficiency: Revised Guidelines for Measurement
- 17 A Brief Introduction to Causal Inference in Healthcare
- 18 Dynamic Assignment of Patients to Primary and Secondary Inpatient Units: Is Patience a Virtue?
- Index
18 - Dynamic Assignment of Patients to Primary and Secondary Inpatient Units: Is Patience a Virtue?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Boxes
- Contributors
- Introduction and Overview
- 1 Overview of Performance Analytics for Healthcare with Examples in R
- 2 Cost-Effectiveness Analysis for Healthcare: From Theory to Practice to Problems and Solutions
- 3 Capabilities, QALYs, and COVID
- 4 The Economic Efficiency of Policies to Reduce Ill Health Involving Environmental Factors
- 5 Health in the National Accounts
- 6 Healthcare as Social Infrastructure: Productivity and the UK National Health Service During and After COVID-19
- 7 Health, Human Capital, and Its Contribution to Economic Growth
- 8 What Do We Know from the Vast Literature on Efficiency and Productivity in Healthcare? A Review and Bibliometric Analysis
- 9 Brief Overview of Production Theory for Analyzing Healthcare Performance
- 10 Modeling Production of Well-Being from an Intermediate Medical Intervention: With an Empirical Demonstration
- 11 Data Envelopment Analysis Applications and US Hospital Policy
- 12 New Tools for Evaluating the Performance of Healthcare Providers Using DEA and FDH Estimators
- 13 Stochastic Frontier Analysis for Healthcare, with Illustrations in R
- 14 A Review of US Stochastic Frontier Studies of Hospital Efficiency Published After 2008
- 15 A Nonparametric Journey through Conditional Frontier Models
- 16 Measuring Health and Healthcare Efficiency: Revised Guidelines for Measurement
- 17 A Brief Introduction to Causal Inference in Healthcare
- 18 Dynamic Assignment of Patients to Primary and Secondary Inpatient Units: Is Patience a Virtue?
- Index
Summary
Various hospitals in the US and around the world suffer from the well-known problem of emergency department (ED) overcrowding, which prevents them from serving patients effectively and efficiently. An important contributor to this problem, which became even more dire after the COVID-19 pandemic, is prolonged boarding of patients who are admitted to inpatient units through the ED. Patients admitted through the ED constitute about 50% of all nonobstetrical hospital admissions in the US, and they may be boarded in the ED for long hours with the hope of finding an available bed in their primary inpatient unit. This chapter sheds light on effective ways of reducing ED boarding times by considering the trade-off between keeping patients in the ED and assigning them to a secondary inpatient unit. Using simulation analyses calibrated with hospital data, they find that implementing this policy could significantly help hospitals to improve their patient safety by reducing boarding times while controlling the overflow of patients to secondary units. Using data analyses and various simulation experiments, they also help hospital administrators by generating insights into hospital conditions under which achievable improvements are significant.
Keywords
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- Information
- The Cambridge Handbook of HealthcareProductivity, Efficiency, Effectiveness, pp. 612 - 656Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024