118 research outputs found

    Health care operations management

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    Health care operations management has become a major topic for health care service providers and society. Operations research already has and further will make considerable contributions for the effective and efficient delivery of health care services. This special issue collects seven carefully selected papers dealing with optimization and decision analysis problems in the field of health care operations management

    Optimizing departure times in vehicle routes

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    Most solution methods for the vehicle routing problem with time\ud windows (VRPTW) develop routes from the earliest feasible departure time. However, in practice, temporal traffic congestions make\ud that such solutions are not optimal with respect to minimizing the\ud total duty time. Furthermore, VRPTW solutions do not account for\ud complex driving hours regulations, which severely restrict the daily\ud travel time available for a truck driver. To deal with these problems,\ud we consider the vehicle departure time optimization (VDO) problem\ud as a post-processing step of solving a VRPTW. We propose an ILP-formulation that minimizes the total duty time. The obtained solutions are feasible with respect to driving hours regulations and they\ud account for temporal traffic congestions by modeling time-dependent\ud travel times. For the latter, we assume a piecewise constant speed\ud function. Computational experiments show that problem instances\ud of realistic sizes can be solved to optimality within practical computation times. Furthermore, duty time reductions of 8 percent can\ud be achieved. Finally, the results show that ignoring time-dependent\ud travel times and driving hours regulations during the development of\ud vehicle routes leads to many infeasible vehicle routes. Therefore, vehicle routing methods should account for these real-life restrictions

    Vehicle routing under time-dependent travel times: the impact of congestion avoidance

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    Daily traffic congestions form major problems for businesses such\ud as logistical service providers and distribution firms. They cause\ud late arrivals at customers and additional hiring costs for the truck\ud drivers. The additional costs of traffic congestions can be reduced\ud by taking into account and avoid well-predictable traffic congestions\ud within off-line vehicle route plans. In the literature, various strategies\ud are proposed to avoid traffic congestions, such as selecting alternative routes, changing the customer visit sequences, and changing the\ud vehicle-customer assignments. We investigate the impact of these and\ud other congestion avoidance strategies in off-line vehicle route plans on\ud the performance of these plans in reality. For this purpose, we develop\ud a set of VRP instances on real road networks, and a speed model that\ud inhabits the main characteristics of peak hour congestion. The instances are solved for different levels of congestion avoidance using a\ud modified Dijkstra algorithm and a restricted dynamic programming\ud heuristic. Computational experiments show that 99% of late arrivals\ud at customers can be eliminated if traffic congestions are accounted for\ud off-line. On top of that, almost 70% of the extra duty times caused by\ud the traffic congestions can be eliminated by clever avoidance strategies

    A hierarchical approach to multi-project planning under uncertainty

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    We survey several viewpoints on the management of the planning complexity of multi-project organisations under uncertainty. A positioning framework is proposed to distinguish between different types of project-driven organisations, which is meant to aid project management in the choice between the various existing planning approaches. We discuss the current state of the art of hierarchical planning approaches both for traditional manufacturing and for project environments. We introduce a generic hierarchical project planning and control framework that serves to position planning methods for multi-project planning under uncertainty. We discuss multiple techniques for dealing with the uncertainty inherent to the different hierarchical stages in a multi-project organisation. In the last part of this paper we discuss two cases from practice and we relate these practical cases to the positioning framework that is put forward in the paper

    Vehicle Routing with Traffic Congestion and Drivers' Driving and Working Rules

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    For the intensively studied vehicle routing problem (VRP), two real-life restrictions have received only minor attention in the VRP-literature: traffic congestion and driving hours regulations. Traffic congestion causes late arrivals at customers and long travel times resulting in large transport costs. To account for traffic congestion, time-dependent travel times should be considered when constructing vehicle routes. Next, driving hours regulations, which restrict the available driving and working times for truck drivers, must be respected. Since violations are severely fined, also driving hours regulations should be considered when constructing vehicle routes, even more in combination with congestion problems. The objective of this paper is to develop a solution method for the VRP with time windows (VRPTW), time-dependent travel times, and driving hours regulations. The major difficulty of this VRPTW extension is to optimize each vehicle’s departure times to minimize the duty time of each driver. Having compact duty times leads to cost savings. However, obtaining compact duty times is much harder when time-dependent travel times and driving hours regulations are considered. We propose a restricted dynamic programming (DP) heuristic for constructing the vehicles routes, and an efficient heuristic for optimizing the vehicle’s departure times for each (partial) vehicle route, such that the complete solution algorithm runs in polynomial time. Computational experiments emonstrate the trade-off between travel distance minimization and duty time minimization, and illustrate the cost savings of extending the depot opening hours such that traveling before the morning peak and after the evening peak becomes possible

    Optimizing departure times in vehicle routes

    Get PDF
    Most solution methods for the vehicle routing problem with time windows (VRPTW) develop routes from the earliest feasible departure time. In practice, however, temporary traffic congestion make such solutions non-optimal with respect to minimizing the total duty time. Furthermore, the VRPTW does not account for driving hours regulations, which restrict the available travel time for truck drivers. To deal with these problems, we consider the vehicle departure time optimization (VDO) problem as a post-processing of a VRPTW. We propose an ILP formulation that minimizes the total duty time. The results of a case study indicate that duty time reductions of 15% can be achieved. Furthermore, computational experiments on VRPTW benchmarks indicate that ignoring traffic congestion or driving hours regulations leads to practically infeasible solutions. Therefore, new vehicle routing methods should be developed that account for these common restrictions. We propose an integrated approach based on classical insertion heuristic

    Eerst weekend! Wiskunde in dienst van een sociaal leven

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    Het sociale leven - sportactiviteiten, verjaardagsbezoeken, het ontmoeten van vrienden - vindt vooral in de weekeinden plaats. Dit maakt werken in het weekend voor veel mensen onaantrekkelijk. In sectoren waar de dienstverlening 7 dagen in de week en 24 uur per dag beschikbaar moet zijn, zoals in de gezondheidszorg en de beveiligingssector, dienen medewerkers wel in het weekend te werken. Het maken van goede dienstroosters voor het weekend is een uitdaging: medewerkers hebben vaak heel specifieke voorkeuren terwijl de werkgever moet zorgen dat er voldoende mensen worden ingezet. Het maken van goede dienstroosters wordt verder bemoeilijkt doordat er rekening moet worden gehouden met de Arbeidstijdenwetgeving (ATW) en omdat werkgevers de diensten 'eerlijk' over de medewerkers willen verdelen

    Analytical models to determine room requirements in outpatient clinics

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    Outpatient clinics traditionally organize processes such that the doctor remains in a consultation room while patients visit for consultation, we call this the Patient-to-Doctor policy (PtD-policy). A different approach is the Doctor-to-Patient policy (DtP-policy), whereby the doctor travels between multiple consultation rooms, in which patients prepare for their consultation. In the latter approach, the doctor saves time by consulting fully prepared patients. We use a queueing theoretic and a discrete-event simulation approach to provide generic models that enable performance evaluations of the two policies for different parameter settings. These models can be used by managers of outpatient clinics to compare the two policies and choose a particular policy when redesigning the patient process.We use the models to analytically show that the DtP-policy is superior to the PtD-policy under the condition that the doctor’s travel time between rooms is lower than the patient’s preparation time. In addition, to calculate the required number of consultation rooms in the DtP-policy, we provide an expression for the fraction of consultations that are in immediate succession; or, in other words, the fraction of time the next patient is prepared and ready, immediately after a doctor finishes a consultation. We apply our methods for a range of distributions and parameters and to a case study in a medium-sized general hospital that inspired this research

    Tactical planning in healthcare using approximate dynamic programming

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    Tactical planning of resources in hospitals concerns elective patient admission planning and the intermediate term allocation of resource capacities. Its main objectives are to achieve equitable access for patients, to serve the strategically agreed number of patients, and to use resources efficiently. We propose a method to develop a tactical resource allocation and patient admission plan that takes stochastic elements into consideration, thereby providing robust plans. Our method is developed in an Approximate Dynamic Programming (ADP) framework and copes with multiple resources, multiple time periods and multiple patient groups with various uncertain treatment paths through the hospital and an uncertain number of arrivals in each time period, thereby integrating decision making for a chain of hospital resources. Computational results indicate that the ADP approach provides an accurate approximation of the value functions, and that it is suitable for large problem instances at hospitals, in which the ADP approach performs significantly better than two other heuristic approaches. Our ADP algorithm is generic, as various cost functions and basis functions can be used in various settings of tactical hospital management
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