20,142 research outputs found
Organisation et planification de la main-d'oeuvre : applications en santé et en industrie
Revue de la littérature sur l'organisation et la planification de la main-d'oeuvre -- Analysis of a territorial approach to the delivery of nursing home care services based on historical data -- A patient assignment algorithm for home care services -- A flexible milp model multiple-shift workforce planning under annualized hours112
Making Medical Homes Work: Moving From Concept to Practice
Explores practical considerations for implementing a medical home program of physician practices committed to coordinating and integrating care based on patient needs and priorities, such as how to qualify medical homes and how to match patients to them
Fast Load Balancing Approach for Growing Clusters by Bioinformatics
This paper presents Fast load balancing technique inspired by Bioinformatics
is a special case to assign a particular patient with a specialist physician
cluster at real time. The work is considered soft presentation of the Gaussian
mixture model based on the extracted features supplied by patients. Based on
the likelihood ratio test, the patient is assigned to a specialist physician
cluster. The presented algorithms efficiently handle any size and any numbers
of incoming patient requests and rapidly placed them to the specialist
physician cluster. Hence it smoothly balances the traffic load of patients even
at a hazard situation in the case of natural calamities. The simulation results
are presented with variable size of specialist physician clusters that well
address the issue for randomly growing patient size.Comment: 4 Pages, 2 figure
Taxonomic classification of planning decisions in health care: a review of the state of the art in OR/MS
We provide a structured overview of the typical decisions to be made in resource capacity planning and control in health care, and a review of relevant OR/MS articles for each planning decision. The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, to position the planning decisions, a taxonomy is presented. This taxonomy provides health care managers and OR/MS researchers with a method to identify, break down and classify planning and control decisions. Second, following the taxonomy, for six health care services, we provide an exhaustive specification of planning and control decisions in resource capacity planning and control. For each planning and control decision, we structurally review the key OR/MS articles and the OR/MS methods and techniques that are applied in the literature to support decision making
On Designing of a Low Leakage Patient-Centric Provider Network
When a patient in a provider network seeks services outside of their
community, the community experiences a leakage. Leakage is undesirable as it
typically leads to higher out-of-network cost for patient and increases barrier
for care coordination, which is particularly problematic for Accountable Care
Organization (ACO) as the in-network providers are financially responsible for
patient quality and outcome. We aim to design a data-driven method to identify
naturally occurring provider networks driven by diabetic patient choices, and
understand the relationship among provider composition, patient composition,
and service leakage pattern. We construct a healthcare provider network based
on patients' historical medical insurance claims. A community detection
algorithm is used to identify naturally occurring communities of collaborating
providers. Finally, import-export analysis is conducted to benchmark their
leakage pattern and identify further leakage reduction opportunity. The design
yields six major provider communities with diverse profiles. Some communities
are geographically concentrated, while others tend to draw patients with
certain diabetic co-morbidities. Providers from the same healthcare institution
are likely to be assigned to the same community. While most communities have
high within-community utilization and spending, at 85% and 86% respectively,
leakage still persists. Hence, we utilize a metric from import-export analysis
to detect leakage, gaining insight on how to minimizing leakage. In conclusion,
we identify patient-driven provider organization by surfacing providers who
share a large number of patients. By analyzing the import-export behavior of
each identified community using a novel approach and profiling community
patient and provider composition we understand the key features of having a
balanced number of PCP and specialists and provider heterogeneity
A Profile of Medicaid Managed Care Programs in 2010: Findings From a 50-State Survey
Examines types of Medicaid managed care organizations and contracts by state, including managed care organizations and primary care case management programs; issues for measuring, monitoring, and improving quality; and implications of health reform
Expanding Paramedicine in the Community (EPIC): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
BackgroundThe incidence of chronic diseases, including diabetes mellitus (DM), heart failure (HF) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is on the rise. The existing health care system must evolve to meet the growing needs of patients with these chronic diseases and reduce the strain on both acute care and hospital-based health care resources. Paramedics are an allied health care resource consisting of highly-trained practitioners who are comfortable working independently and in collaboration with other resources in the out-of-hospital setting. Expanding the paramedic's scope of practice to include community-based care may decrease the utilization of acute care and hospital-based health care resources by patients with chronic disease.Methods/designThis will be a pragmatic, randomized controlled trial comparing a community paramedic intervention to standard of care for patients with one of three chronic diseases. The objective of the trial is to determine whether community paramedics conducting regular home visits, including health assessments and evidence-based treatments, in partnership with primary care physicians and other community based resources, will decrease the rate of hospitalization and emergency department use for patients with DM, HF and COPD. The primary outcome measure will be the rate of hospitalization at one year. Secondary outcomes will include measures of health system utilization, overall health status, and cost-effectiveness of the intervention over the same time period. Outcome measures will be assessed using both Poisson regression and negative binomial regression analyses to assess the primary outcome.DiscussionThe results of this study will be used to inform decisions around the implementation of community paramedic programs. If successful in preventing hospitalizations, it has the ability to be scaled up to other regions, both nationally and internationally. The methods described in this paper will serve as a basis for future work related to this study.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02034045. Date: 9 January 2014
Outcomes Assessment and Health Care Reform
Argues for the use of outcomes assessment in measuring cost-effectiveness and quality to capture the overall impact of multi-dimensional treatment strategies and to identify healthcare systems that both adopt appropriate technologies and perform well
Inferring Hospital Quality from Patient Discharge Records Using a Bayesian Selection Model
This paper develops new econometric methods to estimate hospital quality and other models with discrete dependent variables and non-random selection. Mortality rates in patient discharge records are widely used to infer hospital quality. However, hospital admission is not random and some hospitals may attract patients with greater unobserved severity of illness than others. In this situation the assumption of random admission leads to spurious inference about hospital quality. This study controls for hospital selection using a model in which distance between the patient's residence and alternative hospitals are key exogenous variables. Bayesian inference in this model is feasible using a Markov chain Monte Carlo posterior simulator, and attaches posterior probabilities to quality comparisons between individual hospitals and groups of hospitals. The study uses data on 77.937 Medicare patients admitted to 117 hospitals in Los Angeles County from 1989 through 1992 with a diagnosis of pneumonia. It finds higher quality in smaller hospitals than larger, and in private for-profit hospitals than in hospitals in other ownership categories. Variations in unobserved severity of illness across hospitals is at least a great as variation in hospital quality. Consequently a conventional probit model leads to inferences about quality markedly different than those in this study's selection model.
Ambient-aware continuous care through semantic context dissemination
Background: The ultimate ambient-intelligent care room contains numerous sensors and devices to monitor the patient, sense and adjust the environment and support the staff. This sensor-based approach results in a large amount of data, which can be processed by current and future applications, e. g., task management and alerting systems. Today, nurses are responsible for coordinating all these applications and supplied information, which reduces the added value and slows down the adoption rate. The aim of the presented research is the design of a pervasive and scalable framework that is able to optimize continuous care processes by intelligently reasoning on the large amount of heterogeneous care data.
Methods: The developed Ontology-based Care Platform (OCarePlatform) consists of modular components that perform a specific reasoning task. Consequently, they can easily be replicated and distributed. Complex reasoning is achieved by combining the results of different components. To ensure that the components only receive information, which is of interest to them at that time, they are able to dynamically generate and register filter rules with a Semantic Communication Bus (SCB). This SCB semantically filters all the heterogeneous care data according to the registered rules by using a continuous care ontology. The SCB can be distributed and a cache can be employed to ensure scalability.
Results: A prototype implementation is presented consisting of a new-generation nurse call system supported by a localization and a home automation component. The amount of data that is filtered and the performance of the SCB are evaluated by testing the prototype in a living lab. The delay introduced by processing the filter rules is negligible when 10 or fewer rules are registered.
Conclusions: The OCarePlatform allows disseminating relevant care data for the different applications and additionally supports composing complex applications from a set of smaller independent components. This way, the platform significantly reduces the amount of information that needs to be processed by the nurses. The delay resulting from processing the filter rules is linear in the amount of rules. Distributed deployment of the SCB and using a cache allows further improvement of these performance results
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