Emergency Department Overcrowding : A Four-Hospital Analysis in Medellín and a Strateg y Simulation

Medical emergency services can be overcrowded due to both external and internal ser vice factors. This is evinced in the congestion, longer waits, and dissatisfaction by the users. To identif y and simulate strategies for processing medical emergency requests in order to mitigate t...

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Autor Principal: Restrepo Zea, Jairo Humberto
Otros Autores: Jaén Posada, Juan Sebastián, Espinal Piedrahita, Juan José, Zapata Flórez, Paula Andrea
Formato: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Idioma: spa
Publicado: Editorial Pontificia Universidad Javeriana 2018
Acceso en línea: http://revistas.javeriana.edu.co/index.php/gerepolsal/article/view/23135
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Sumario: Medical emergency services can be overcrowded due to both external and internal ser vice factors. This is evinced in the congestion, longer waits, and dissatisfaction by the users. To identif y and simulate strategies for processing medical emergency requests in order to mitigate the overcrowding. An exploratory and analytical research was conducted based on the field work at four emergency rooms in hospitals of Medellín; simulation strategies were then proposed against the overcrowded ser vice with system dynamics.the strategies included: to reorganize the sign-in, refer to other places those patient not requiring emergency services, implement fast-track ser vices, and increase the inpatient capacity. The last one becomes the most effective strateg y in the simulation. While  the flow strategies can help to solve the ser vice overcrowding due to internal causes as suggested in the literature, these strategies are limited in their scope.  The required patient sign-in strategies as well as the patient discharge strategies are not easy-to-do inthese emergency rooms. Overcrowding can be reduced by thinking of the hospital and the emergency room as two elements in a single system, so that the patient flow can be speeded up; the bed number for inpatients must be improved without overflowing the hospital capacity.