Abstract

Late cancellations of scheduled elective surgery limit the ability of the surgical care service to achieve its goals. Attributes of these cancellations differ between hospitals and regions. The rate of late cancellations of elective surgery conducted in Hamad General Hospital, Doha, Qatar was found to be 13.14% which is similar to rates reported in hospitals elsewhere in the world; although elective surgery is performed six days a week from 7:00 am to 10:00 pm in our hospital. Simple and systematic analysis of these attributes typically provides limited solutions to the cancellation problem. Alternatively, the application of the theory of constraints with its five focusing steps, which analyze the system in its totality, is more likely to provide a better solution to the cancellation problem. To find the constraint, as a first focusing step, we carried out a retrospective and descriptive study using a quantitative approach combined with the Pareto Principle to find the main causes of cancellations, followed by a qualitative approach to find the main and ultimate underlying cause which pointed to the bed crisis. The remaining four focusing steps provided workable and effective solutions to reduce the cancellation rate of elective surgery.

Highlights

  • Booking elective surgery is considered a contract between the patient and healthcare institution

  • The rate of late cancellations of elective surgery conducted in Hamad General Hospital, Doha, Qatar was found to be 13.14% which is similar to rates reported in hospitals elsewhere in the world; elective surgery is performed six days a week from 7:00 am to 10:00 pm in our hospital

  • The average age of patients of cancelled scheduled elective surgical cases was 39.6 ^ 17.67 years, with no significant difference found in cancellation rates between genders

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Booking elective surgery is considered a contract between the patient and healthcare institution. An alternative approach to assess and provide solutions to the problem of elective surgery late cancellations is to apply a strong management tool, one of which is the theory of constraints as published by Eliyahu Goldratt in 1984 in his book "The Goal".(21) According to this theory, the solution of any problem needs systemic thinking. In this context, the different steps of the surgical care pathway must be considered as a chain and its weakest step must be considered as the weakest link within this chain. Direct elevation of the different undesirable effects needs time and energy and its results are either short-lived or useless; whereas the elevation of the core problem, the constraint, provides better results and eliminates all its undesirable effects simultaneously.[22]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call