1. Scheduling rules to achieve lead-time targets in outpatient appointment systems
- Author
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Stephen C. Graves, Appa Iyer Sivakumar, Thu Ba T. Nguyen, Sloan School of Management, Nguyen, Thu Ba Thi, and Graves, Stephen C
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Waiting Lists ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Scheduling (production processes) ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,02 engineering and technology ,Appointment scheduling ,Efficiency, Organizational ,Health informatics ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Health Services Accessibility ,Health administration ,Resource Allocation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Appointments and Schedules ,Outpatients ,Medicine ,Outpatient clinic ,Humans ,Operations management ,Singapore ,021103 operations research ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Models, Organizational ,General Health Professions ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Lead time ,Resource utilization - Abstract
This paper considers how to schedule appointments for outpatients, for a clinic that is subject to appointment lead-time targets for both new and returning patients. We develop heuristic rules, which are the exact and relaxed appointment scheduling rules, to schedule each new patient appointment (only) in light of uncertainty about future arrivals. The scheduling rules entail two decisions. First, the rules need to determine whether or not a patient's request can be accepted; then, if the request is not rejected, the rules prescribe how to assign the patient to an available slot. The intent of the scheduling rules is to maximize the utilization of the planned resource (i.e., the physician staff), or equivalently to maximize the number of patients that are admitted, while maintaining the service targets on the median, the 95th percentile, and the maximum appointment lead-times. We test the proposed scheduling rules with numerical experiments using real data from the chosen clinic of Tan Tock Seng hospital in Singapore. The results show the efficiency and the efficacy of the scheduling rules, in terms of the service-target satisfaction and the resource utilization. From the sensitivity analysis, we find that the performance of the proposed scheduling rules is fairly robust to the specification of the established lead-time targets.
- Published
- 2015