Abstract

Emergency department (ED) overcrowding threatens healthcare quality. Ambulance diversion (AD) may relieve ED overcrowding; however, diverting patients from an overcrowded ED will load neighboring EDs with more patients and may result in regional overcrowding. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of different diversion strategies on the crowdedness of multiple EDs in a region. The importance of regional coordination was also explored. A queuing model for patient flow was utilized to develop a computer program for simulating AD among EDs in a region. Key parameters, including patient arrival rates, percentages of patients of different acuity levels, percentage of patients transported by ambulance, and total resources of EDs, were assigned based on real data. The crowdedness indices of each ED and the regional crowdedness index were assessed to evaluate the effectiveness of various AD strategies. Diverting patients equally to all other EDs in a region is better than diverting patients only to EDs with more resources. The effect of diverting all ambulance-transported patients is similar to that of diverting only low-acuity patients. To minimize regional crowdedness, ambulatory patients should be sent to proper EDs when AD is initiated. Based on a queuing model with parameters calibrated by real data, patient flows of EDs in a region were simulated by a computer program. From a regional point of view, randomly diverting ambulatory patients provides almost no benefit. With regards to minimizing the crowdedness of the whole region, the most promising strategy is to divert all patients equally to all other EDs that are not already crowded. This result implies that communication and coordination among regional hospitals are crucial to relieve overall crowdedness. A regional coordination center may prioritize AD strategies to optimize ED utility.

Highlights

  • Emergency department (ED) overcrowding threatens healthcare quality and is becoming a worldwide problem [1]

  • When the crowdedness index (CI) of an ED reaches the critical value of 1.0 and Ambulance diversion (AD) is initiated, patients are typically diverted to EDs that have more medical resources

  • Would giving EDs the option of diverting ambulatory patients make a significant difference in relieving ED crowdedness? What patient diversion strategy would result in the optimal usage of all medical resources in the region?

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Summary

Introduction

Emergency department (ED) overcrowding threatens healthcare quality and is becoming a worldwide problem [1]. The Impact of Ambulance Diversion on Regional Crowdedness understanding of ED overcrowding [2,3,4,5]. Throughput, and output processes of EDs can relieve ED overcrowding [6,7,8,9]. Ambulance diversion (AD) reduces ED patient input and, may relieve overcrowding [10], especially because ambulance-transported patients are generally sicker and may utilize more ED resources [11,12]. Diverting patients from an overcrowded ED loads neighboring EDs with more patients and, may result in overcrowding of neighboring EDs. The implementation of AD by any single ED may worsen regional emergency health care. The effectiveness of AD policies should be quantitatively evaluated and should be tailored for local practices [13,14,15]

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