Abstract

Demographic changes, particularly population ageing, and rising morbidity from chronic conditions contribute to ever-increasing pressures on health and care systems in developed countries. Partly as a response, new models of care and service innovations are being piloted and introduced. However, the effectiveness and sustainability of these complex health system transformations are often not well understood and most modelling studies fail to capture both system configuration and populating dynamics. In this paper, we present a comprehensive system dynamics modelling approach to capture both population ageing and the organisation of the health and care services from a whole system perspective. The development of the model was directly informed by an ambitious care system transformation project designed to offer a different pathway for those patients deemed to be complex. The model input parameters were populated using estimates from empirical data. A series of simulation experiments were conducted to inform the design of the new service and its sustainability. We found that, subject to the model’s limitations and assumptions, the new pathway could have a stabilising effect against increasing demand provided hospital readmission fractions and length of stay for complex patients can be managed effectively.

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