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Here’s something we prepared earlier: development, use and reuse of a configurable, inter-disciplinary approach for tackling overcrowding in NHS hospitals

Here’s something we prepared earlier: development, use and reuse of a configurable, inter-disciplinary approach for tackling overcrowding in NHS hospitals
Here’s something we prepared earlier: development, use and reuse of a configurable, inter-disciplinary approach for tackling overcrowding in NHS hospitals
Overcrowding affects hospital emergency departments (ED) worldwide. Most OR studies addressing overcrowding develop bespoke models to explore potential improvements but ignore the organisational context in which they would be implemented, and few influence practice. There is interest in whether reusable models, for ED crowding and in healthcare generally, could have more impact. We developed a configurable approach for tackling ED overcrowding. A reusable queuing model for exploring drivers of ED performance was augmented by a qualitative approach for exploring the implementation context and a generic framework for assessing the likely compatibility of interventions with a given organisation. At the hospital where the approach was developed it directly informed strategy. We describe reuse of the approach at three hospitals. One project was completed and well-received by hospital management, two were terminated partway when data problems surfaced. The primary contribution of this work is its novelty in considering, alongside quantitative modelling, evidence-based interventions to overcrowding and qualitative assessment of a hospital’s aptitude and capability to adopt different interventions. A secondary contribution is to further the debate on model reuse, particularly by introducing more complex, modelling-centred approaches that acknowledge how models must relate to tangible interventions with reasonable prospects of being adopted locally.
health services, practice of OR, queuing
0160-5682
Crowe, Sonya
f6843726-4b5c-40aa-a927-e4deec8f53e1
Grieco, Luca
a6d658e1-64c0-4ef9-9493-37705f1680ac
Monks, Thomas
fece343c-106d-461d-a1dd-71c1772627ca
Keogh, Bradley J.J.
b698d61e-30f2-483a-bd87-41368c08f708
Penn, Marion
44e30bd0-fd1a-41b9-b7ed-4a46c656ef8a
Clancy, Mike
3d19521d-8495-42d5-b346-b7b89401d70e
Crowe, Sonya
f6843726-4b5c-40aa-a927-e4deec8f53e1
Grieco, Luca
a6d658e1-64c0-4ef9-9493-37705f1680ac
Monks, Thomas
fece343c-106d-461d-a1dd-71c1772627ca
Keogh, Bradley J.J.
b698d61e-30f2-483a-bd87-41368c08f708
Penn, Marion
44e30bd0-fd1a-41b9-b7ed-4a46c656ef8a
Clancy, Mike
3d19521d-8495-42d5-b346-b7b89401d70e

Crowe, Sonya, Grieco, Luca, Monks, Thomas, Keogh, Bradley J.J., Penn, Marion and Clancy, Mike (2023) Here’s something we prepared earlier: development, use and reuse of a configurable, inter-disciplinary approach for tackling overcrowding in NHS hospitals. Journal of the Operational Research Society. (doi:10.1080/01605682.2023.2199094).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Overcrowding affects hospital emergency departments (ED) worldwide. Most OR studies addressing overcrowding develop bespoke models to explore potential improvements but ignore the organisational context in which they would be implemented, and few influence practice. There is interest in whether reusable models, for ED crowding and in healthcare generally, could have more impact. We developed a configurable approach for tackling ED overcrowding. A reusable queuing model for exploring drivers of ED performance was augmented by a qualitative approach for exploring the implementation context and a generic framework for assessing the likely compatibility of interventions with a given organisation. At the hospital where the approach was developed it directly informed strategy. We describe reuse of the approach at three hospitals. One project was completed and well-received by hospital management, two were terminated partway when data problems surfaced. The primary contribution of this work is its novelty in considering, alongside quantitative modelling, evidence-based interventions to overcrowding and qualitative assessment of a hospital’s aptitude and capability to adopt different interventions. A secondary contribution is to further the debate on model reuse, particularly by introducing more complex, modelling-centred approaches that acknowledge how models must relate to tangible interventions with reasonable prospects of being adopted locally.

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Here s something we prepared earlier Development use and reuse of a configurable inter disciplinary approach for tackling overcrowding in NHS - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 July 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 April 2023
Published date: 18 April 2023
Keywords: health services, practice of OR, queuing

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 476979
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476979
ISSN: 0160-5682
PURE UUID: 940dd574-863a-4791-b2ad-62da66cbdc7f
ORCID for Thomas Monks: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2631-4481
ORCID for Bradley J.J. Keogh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2960-0918
ORCID for Marion Penn: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7269-7981

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Date deposited: 23 May 2023 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 01:58

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Contributors

Author: Sonya Crowe
Author: Luca Grieco
Author: Thomas Monks ORCID iD
Author: Bradley J.J. Keogh ORCID iD
Author: Marion Penn ORCID iD
Author: Mike Clancy

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