• DocumentCode
    2155696
  • Title

    A System for Patient Management Based Discrete-Event Simulation and Hierarchical Clustering

  • Author

    Codrington-Virtue, Anthony ; Chaussalet, Thierry ; Millard, Peter ; Whittlestone, Paul ; Kelly, John

  • Author_Institution
    Health & Social Care Modelling Group, Westminster Univ., London
  • fYear
    0
  • fDate
    0-0 0
  • Firstpage
    800
  • Lastpage
    804
  • Abstract
    Hospital Accident and Emergency (A&E) departments in England have a 4 hour target to treat 98% of patients from arrival to discharge, admission or transfer. Managing resources to meet the target and deliver care across the range of A&E services is a huge challenge for A&E managers. This paper develops an intelligent patient management tool to help managers and clinicians better understand patient length of stay and resources within an A&E area. The developed discrete-event simulation model gives a highlevel representation of ambulance arrivals into A&E. The model facilitates analysis in the following ways: visually interactive software showing patient length of stay in the A&E area; patient activity broken down into sub-groups so that intelligence might be gathered on how sub-groups affect the overall length of stay; understanding the number of patient treatment places and nurse resources required. To support ease of inputs for scenario and sensitivity testing, data is entered into the simulation model (SimulS) via Excel spreadsheets. The model discussed in this paper used patient length of stay grouped by A&E diagnosis codes and was limited to ambulance arrivals. The analysis was derived from A&E attendance in 2004 from an English hospital
  • Keywords
    discrete event simulation; health care; patient treatment; Excel spreadsheets; discrete-event simulation; hierarchical clustering; intelligent patient management tool; patient management; patient treatment; simulation model; Accidents; Computational modeling; Disaster management; Discrete event simulation; Hospitals; Medical services; Medical simulation; Medical treatment; Resource management; Testing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Computer-Based Medical Systems, 2006. CBMS 2006. 19th IEEE International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Salt Lake City, UT
  • ISSN
    1063-7125
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-2517-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/CBMS.2006.31
  • Filename
    1647669