A norm utilisation for scarce hospital resources: Evidence from operating rooms in a Dutch university hospital

Background: Utilisation of operating rooms is high on the agenda of hospital managers and researchers. Many efforts in the area of maximising the utilisation have been focussed on finding the holy grail of 100% utilisation. The utilisation that can be realised, however, depends on the patient mix and the willingness to accept the risk of working in overtime. Materials and methods: This is a mathematical modelling study that investigates the association between the utilisation and the patient mix that is served and the risk of working in overtime. Prospectively, consecutively, and routinely col... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Houdenhoven, Mark van
Hans, Erwin W.
Klein, Jan
Wullink, Gerhard
Kazemier, Geert
Dokumenttyp: article / Letter to editor
Erscheinungsdatum: 2007
Verlag/Hrsg.: Springer
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26678524
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : http://purl.utwente.nl/publications/88923

Background: Utilisation of operating rooms is high on the agenda of hospital managers and researchers. Many efforts in the area of maximising the utilisation have been focussed on finding the holy grail of 100% utilisation. The utilisation that can be realised, however, depends on the patient mix and the willingness to accept the risk of working in overtime. Materials and methods: This is a mathematical modelling study that investigates the association between the utilisation and the patient mix that is served and the risk of working in overtime. Prospectively, consecutively, and routinely collected data of an operating room department in a Dutch university hospital are used. Basic statistical principles are used to establish the relation between realistic utilisation rates, patient mixes, and accepted risk of overtime. Results: Accepting a low risk of overtime combined with a complex patient mix results a low utilisation rate. If the accepted risk of overtime is higher and the patient mix is less complex, the utilisation rate that can be reached is closer to 100%. Conclusion: Because of the inherent variability of health-care processes, the holy grail of 100% utilisation is unlikely to be found. The method proposed in this paper calculates a realistic benchmark utilisation that incorporates the patient mix characteristics and the willingness to accept risk of overtime.