Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has had global effects; cases have been counted in the tens of millions, and there have been over two million deaths throughout the world. Health systems have been stressed in trying to provide a response to the increasing demand for hospital beds during the different waves. This paper analyzes the dynamic response of the hospitals of the Community of Madrid (CoM) during the first wave of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic in the period between 18 March and 31 May 2020. The aim was to model the response of the CoM’s health system in terms of the number of available beds. Methods: A research design based on a case study of the CoM was developed. To model this response, we use two concepts: “bed margin” (available beds minus occupied beds, expressed as a percentage) and “flexibility” (which describes the ability to adapt to the growing demand for beds). The Linear Hinges Model allowed a robust estimation of the key performance indicators for capturing the flexibility of the available beds in hospitals. Three new flexibility indicators were defined: the Average Ramp Rate Until the Peak (ARRUP), the Ramp Duration Until the Peak (RDUP), and the Ramp Growth Until the Peak (RGUP). Results: The public and private hospitals of the CoM were able to increase the number of available beds from 18,692 on 18 March 2020 to 23,623 on 2 April 2020. At the peak of the wave, the number of available beds increased by 160 in 48 h, with an occupancy of 90.3%. Within that fifteen-day period, the number of COVID-19 inpatients increased by 200% in non-intensive care unit (non-ICU) wards and by 155% in intensive care unit (ICU) wards. The estimated ARRUP for non-ICU beds in the CoM hospital network during the first pandemic wave was 305.56 beds/day, the RDUP was 15 days, and the RGUP was 4598 beds. For the ICU beds, the ARRUP was 36.73 beds/day, the RDUP was 20 days, and the RGUP was 735 beds. This paper includes a further analysis of the response estimated for each hospital. Conclusions: This research provides insights not only for academia, but also for hospital management and practitioners. The results show that not all of the hospitals dealt with the sudden increase in bed demand in the same way, nor did they provide the same flexibility in order to increase their bed capabilities. The bed margin and the proposed indicators of flexibility summarize the dynamic response and can be included as part of a hospital’s management dashboard for monitoring its behavior during pandemic waves or other health crises as a complement to other, more steady-state indicators.
Highlights
When severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was first discovered in Wuhan (China) in December 2019, even the most qualified experts did not anticipate that it would rapidly spread to create the worst global public health crisis since the 1918 flu pandemic [1]
If we look at the situation of beds in the Community of Madrid (CoM)’s hospitals to describe their evolution, which is the main objective of this paper, it can be seen that the number of patients hospitalized just for COVID-19 in the intensive care units (ICUs) was 1514, and
In order to quantify this flexibility, we propose three different indexes: the Ramp Duration Until the Peak (RDUP), the Ramp Growth Until the Peak (RGUP), and the Average Ramp Rate Until the Peak (ARRUP)
Summary
When severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was first discovered in Wuhan (China) in December 2019, even the most qualified experts did not anticipate that it would rapidly spread to create the worst global public health crisis since the 1918 flu pandemic [1]. It is well known that emerging viral pandemics “can place extraordinary and sustained demands on public health and healthcare systems and on providers of essential community services” [2]. COVID-19 pandemic is a dramatic event, which takes place in a difficult environment with enormous emotional tension, coupled with a serious disproportion between needs and available resources. In these circumstances, managing healthcare services is a constant and changing challenge [3]. In some of its Autonomous Communities (ACs), in the Autonomous Community of Madrid (CoM), where the capital of
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