Abstract

ABSTRACT In July 2017, the board of directors of Hospital São Felipe, a traditional hospital located in Minas Gerais, met to discuss the results of the satisfaction survey conducted at the hospital, where it was clear there was great customer dissatisfaction with the emergency service. In the previous year, the hospital emergency service received, on average, about 6,300 patients a month, divided in three specialties: general clinic, orthopedics, and ophthalmology. The director of emergency services had twenty days to submit a plan of action to address the problems identified in the emergency area, particularly those related to the waiting lines: wait time, lack of comfort, inattention of employees, and so on. The first action taken by the director was to collect data that would enable him to analyze wait times during the process: What time did the patient arrive at the emergency service? How long the patient waited to be attended by the receptionist? How long the patient waited for triage? and so on. With these data, he believed that he would have a better understanding of the process flow and would be able to propose solutions to the problem of waiting lines in the emergency area. The case was written with the educational goal of working with the concept of capacity management in services and with ways to deal with the demand variability, especially in high-touch and unpredictable services, as in the case of an emergency service.

Highlights

  • Dr Fabio Antunes left the tense board meeting aware that his job was on the line

  • Demand management: Educate the patient about what an emergency is and inform them about the emergency services offered by the hospital

  • The hospital tries to assist everyone, even if they are not emergency cases, but it should communicate this to the customers asking for their understanding for waiting

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Dr Fabio Antunes left the tense board meeting aware that his job was on the line. Since he had taken on the position of Emergency Director at Hospital São Felipe over a year ago, his challenges had only grown: increasing number of outpatients coming for emergency treatment, many complaints from customers about having to wait a long time, patients expressing their disgust at so many delays in the waiting room, etc. “The culprits are present in this room This is not the level of services I want to give to customers coming to us for emergency care. 1. Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Instituto COPPEAD de Administração, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. Chimenti (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, COPPEAD, Brazil). Peer Review Report: The Peer Review Report is available at this external URL: Received: September 28, 2019 Last version received: June 03, 2020

BACKGROUND
Demand management
Findings
Managing the wait and the psychology of waiting lines
Full Text
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