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Mapping the Flow of Pediatric Trauma Patients Using Process Mining

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BACKGROUND Inhospital pediatric trauma care typically spans multiple locations, which influences the use of resources, that could be improved by gaining a better understanding of the inhospital flow of patients… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND Inhospital pediatric trauma care typically spans multiple locations, which influences the use of resources, that could be improved by gaining a better understanding of the inhospital flow of patients and identifying opportunities for improvement. OBJECTIVES To describe a process mining approach for mapping the inhospital flow of pediatric trauma patients, to identify and characterize the major patient pathways and care transitions, and to identify opportunities for patient flow and triage improvement. METHODS From the trauma registry of a level I pediatric trauma center, data were extracted regarding the two highest trauma activation levels, Alpha (nā€‰=ā€‰228) and Bravo (nā€‰=ā€‰1,713). An event log was generated from the admission, discharge, and transfer data from which patient pathways and care transitions were identified and described. The Flexible Heuristics Miner algorithm was used to generate a process map for the cohort, and separate process maps for Alpha and Bravo encounters, which were assessed for conformance when fitness value was less than 0.950, with the identification and comparison of conforming and nonconforming encounters. RESULTS The process map for the cohort was similar to a validated process map derived through qualitative methods. The process map for Bravo encounters had a relatively low fitness of 0.887, and 96 (5.6%) encounters were identified as nonconforming with characteristics comparable to Alpha encounters. In total, 28 patient pathways and 20 care transitions were identified. The top five patient pathways were traversed by 92.1% of patients, whereas the top five care transitions accounted for 87.5% of all care transitions. A larger-than-expected number of discharges from the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) were identified, with 84.2% involving discharge to home without the need for home care services. CONCLUSION Process mining was successfully applied to derive process maps from trauma registry data and to identify opportunities for trauma triage improvement and optimization of PICU use.

Keywords: process; pediatric trauma; process mining; care transitions

Journal Title: Applied clinical informatics
Year Published: 2018

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