Application of operations research techniques to improve efficiency in the emergency department


Autoria(s): Diefenbach, Melissa Lynne
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

The main aim of this thesis is to analyse and optimise a public hospital Emergency Department. The Emergency Department (ED) is a complex system with limited resources and a high demand for these resources. Adding to the complexity is the stochastic nature of almost every element and characteristic in the ED. The interaction with other functional areas also complicates the system as these areas have a huge impact on the ED and the ED is powerless to change them. Therefore it is imperative that OR be applied to the ED to improve the performance within the constraints of the system. The main characteristics of the system to optimise included tardiness, adherence to waiting time targets, access block and length of stay. A validated and verified simulation model was built to model the real life system. This enabled detailed analysis of resources and flow without disruption to the actual ED. A wide range of different policies for the ED and a variety of resources were able to be investigated. Of particular interest was the number and type of beds in the ED and also the shift times of physicians. One point worth noting was that neither of these resources work in isolation and for optimisation of the system both resources need to be investigated in tandem. The ED was likened to a flow shop scheduling problem with the patients and beds being synonymous with the jobs and machines typically found in manufacturing problems. This enabled an analytic scheduling approach. Constructive heuristics were developed to reactively schedule the system in real time and these were able to improve the performance of the system. Metaheuristics that optimised the system were also developed and analysed. An innovative hybrid Simulated Annealing and Tabu Search algorithm was developed that out-performed both simulated annealing and tabu search algorithms by combining some of their features. The new algorithm achieves a more optimal solution and does so in a shorter time.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/48078/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/48078/1/Mel_Diefenbach_Thesis.pdf

Diefenbach, Melissa Lynne (2010) Application of operations research techniques to improve efficiency in the emergency department. PhD thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology; Mathematical Sciences

Palavras-Chave #operations research, efficiency, emergency department
Tipo

Thesis