Go with the flow
- PDF / 1,916,298 Bytes
- 4 Pages / 589.56 x 841.92 pts Page_size
- 13 Downloads / 196 Views
		    Go with the flow Modelling bed occupancy and patient flow through a geriatric department
 
 Sally McClean and Peter Millard Departments of geriatric medicine consist of two
 
 course, die at any stage in their treatment, but it is
 
 generally the case that the majority of patients
 
 distinct forms of clinical activity: acute/rehabilitative and long stay care. These are organistionally distinct and have very different resource needs. Current hospital planning models, however, assume that patients all move through the system at the same
 
 admitted to geriatric hospital are eventually rehabili-
 
 tated and discharged. Nonetheless, the small
 
 proportion who become long stay remain in hospital for months, or even years. Such patients may block
 
 beds for long periods, consuming resources and
 
 rate, thus ignoring this inherent heterogeneity in patient behaviour. We have developed a model
 
 preventing admission of the sick elderly. In addition, the existence of such long stay patients means that simple methods of measuring performance which are generally in use, such as the crude turnover or
 
 which allows for this.
 
 The model may be used to estimate the average
 
 mean length of stay for a patient, are no longer
 
 numbers and lengths of stay for short-and long-stay patients and assess the effect of system changes such as converting long-stay to short-stay beds.
 
 appropriate. Instead we must develop measures of throughput for a Geriatric Department which take
 
 into account the fact that there are different streams
 
 of patients flowing through the beds at different
 
 The model has been implemented in a software package for Bed Occupancy, Management and
 
 rates, determined by their current stage of care.
 
 Planning (BOMPS) which uses daily bed occupancy census data. It is hoped that such an approach will
 
 We have therefore developed a model which may be
 
 used to analyse the pattern of bed occupancy of Geriatric Departments. This can help hospital staff to make policy decisions regarding the relative
 
 provide more effective planning for the geriatric hospital seivice.
 
 Background
 
 advantages of policies such as increasing treatment rates versus decreasing the fraction of patients who
 
 The proportion of elderly people in the population is increasing rapidly, while the relative proportion of
 
 charge rate of acute care patients versus rehabilitating long-stay patients.
 
 are retained as long-stay, or increasing the dis-
 
 younger people participating in the worktorce is declining. The problem of caring for the frail or sick elderly is therefore one requiring urgent attention and careful planning, particularly in an environment of economic recession and government cutbacks.
 
 The Model A model has been constructed in order to analyse the pattern of occupancy of hospital beds in Departments of Geriatric Medicine. This model was developed as a result of the empirical observation that the pattern of bed occupancy is best fitted by the two term mixed exponential distribution of the
 
 In planning services for an aged population, the key factors are that e		
Data Loading...
 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	