Purpose This paper focuses on the contributions of Queueing Theory to hospital capacity management to improve organizational performance and deal with increased demand in the healthcare sector. Design/methodology/approach Models were… Click to show full abstract
Purpose This paper focuses on the contributions of Queueing Theory to hospital capacity management to improve organizational performance and deal with increased demand in the healthcare sector. Design/methodology/approach Models were applied to six months of inpatient records from a University hospital to determine operation measures such as utilization rate, waiting probability, estimated bed capacity, capacity simulations and demand behavior assessment. Findings Irrespective of the findings of the queueing model, the results showed that there is room for improvement in capacity management. Balancing admissions and the type of patient over the week represent a possible solution to optimize bed and nurse utilization. Patient mixing results in a highly sensitive delay rate due to length of stay (LOS) variability, with variations in both the utilization rate and the number of beds. Practical implications The outcomes suggest that operational managers should improve patient admission management, as well as r...
               
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