4 research outputs found
Access and Resource Management for Clinical Care and Clinical Research in Multi-class Stochastic Queueing Networks.
In healthcare delivery systems, proper coordination between patient visits and the health care resources they rely upon is an area in which important new planning capabilities are very valuable to provide greater value to all stakeholders. Managing supply and demand, while providing an appropriate service level for various types of care and patients of differing levels of urgency is a difficult task to achieve. This task becomes even more complex when planning for (i) stochastic demand, (ii) multi-class customers (i.e., patients with different urgency levels), and (iii) multiple services/visit types (which includes multi-visit itineraries of clinical care and/or clinical research visits that are delivered according to research protocols). These complications in the demand stream require service waiting times and itineraries of visits that may span multiple days/weeks and may utilize many different resources in the organization (each resource with at least one specific service being provided). The key objective of this dissertation is to develop planning models for the optimization of capacity allocation while considering the coordination between resources and patient demand in these multi-class stochastic queueing networks in order to meet the service/access levels required for each patient class. This control can be managed by allocating resources to specific patient types/visits over a planning horizon.
In this dissertation, we control key performance metrics that relate to patient access management and resource capacity planning in various healthcare settings with chapters devoted to outpatient services, and clinical research units. The methods developed forecast and optimize (1) the access to care (in a medical specialty) for each patient class, (2) the Time to First Available Visit for clinical research participants enrolling in clinical trials, and (3) the access to downstream resources in an itinerary of care, which we call the itinerary flow time. We also model and control how resources are managed, by incorporating (4) workload/utilization metrics, as well as (5) blocking/overtime probabilities of those resources. We control how to allocate resource capacity along the various multi-visit resource requirements of the patient itineraries, and by doing so, we capture the key correlations between patient access, and resource allocation, coordination, and utilization.PhDIndustrial and Operations EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/116770/1/jivan_1.pd
A Capacity Allocation Planning Model for Integrated Care and Access Management
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146954/1/poms12941-sup-0001-AppendixS1.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146954/2/poms12941_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146954/3/poms12941.pd