Application of Systems Engineering Tools and Methods to Improve Healthcare Delivery Inside the Emergency Department of a Mid-Size Hospital
Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 32804
Application of Systems Engineering Tools and Methods to Improve Healthcare Delivery Inside the Emergency Department of a Mid-Size Hospital

Authors: Mohamed Elshal, Hazim El-Mounayri, Omar El-Mounayri

Abstract:

Emergency department (ED) is considered as a complex system of interacting entities: patients, human resources, software and hardware systems, interfaces, and other systems. This paper represents a research for implementing a detailed Systems Engineering (SE) approach in a mid-size hospital in central Indiana. This methodology will be applied by “The Initiative for Product Lifecycle Innovation (IPLI)” institution at Indiana University to study and solve the crowding problem with the aim of increasing throughput of patients and enhance their treatment experience; therefore, the nature of crowding problem needs to be investigated with all other problems that leads to it. The presented SE methods are workflow analysis and systems modeling where SE tools such as Microsoft Visio are used to construct a group of system-level diagrams that demonstrate: patient’s workflow, documentation and communication flow, data systems, human resources workflow and requirements, leadership involved, and integration between ER different systems. Finally, the ultimate goal will be managing the process through implementation of an executable model using commercialized software tools, which will identify bottlenecks, improve documentation flow, and help make the process faster.

Keywords: Systems modeling, ED operation, workflow modeling, systems analysis.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1127880

Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 1000

References:


[1] PCAST, Better Health Care and Lower Costs: Accelerating Improvement through Systems Engineering. 2014. (https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/PCAST/pcast_systems_engineering_in_healthcare_-_may_2014.pdf).
[2] Sloane. E., 2008. “Systems of Systems (SoSE) Engineering for the 21st Century Healthcare Enterprise.” Paper presented in Proceedings of IEEE International Systems Conference, Montreal, Ca-Que, 7-10 April.
[3] William B., 2008. “Health Care as a Complex Adaptive System: Implications for Design and Management.” National Academy of science journal, Vol. 38.
[4] Thowarth, M., and Arisha, A., 2012. “A Simulation-Based Decision Support System to Model Complex Demand Driven Healthcare Facilities.” Paper presented in Proceedings of the IEEE Winter Simulation Conference.
[5] Ying. S., and Maria, I., 2010. “Hospital Process Modelling and Tool Designing for Healthcare Services.” Paper presented at IEEE International Conference on E-Business and E-Government, Guangzhou, China, 7-9 May.
[6] Patvivatsiri, L., 2006. “A Simulation Model for Bioterrorism Preparedness in an Emergency Room.” Paper presented at Proceedings of IEEE Winter Simulation Conference, Monterey, CA, 3-6 December.
[7] Erik, M. W, and Peck, J. 2008. “Reducing Emergency Department Overcrowding – Five Patient Buffer Concepts in Comparison.” Paper presented in Proceedings of the IEEE Winter Simulation Conference, 7-10 December.
[8] Pearson Lloyd.2013. “Can Digital Updates on Emergency Room Wait Times Reduce Patient Rage?” The Eye Blog, 2013. http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_eye/2013/12/04/emergency_room_design_can_digital_updates_reduce_patient_frustration.html.
[9] Faccin, P., and Rizzato, E., 2010. “Emergency department generalized flexible simulation model.” Paper presented in Proceedings of IEEE workshop on Health Care Management (WHCM), Venice, IT, 18-20 February.