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A challenge for healthcare system resilience after an earthquake: The crowdedness of a first-aid hospital by non-urgent patients
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 4, p e0249522 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- After a violent earthquake, the supply of medical services may fall short of the rising demand, leading to overcrowding in hospitals, and, consequently, a collapse in the healthcare system. This paper takes the emergency care system in Taiwan as the research context, where first-aid hospitals are ranked to three levels, advanced, intermediate, and general, and, currently, emphasizes on a general emergency responsibility hospital. Having limited capacity and capability, a general emergency responsibility hospital treats minor and moderate injuries, from which the majority of earthquake-induced casualties suffer. The purpose of this study is to analyze the impact of this group of earthquake-induced non-urgent patients on the performance of a hospital. A patient flow model was built to represent patients’ paths throughout emergency care. Based on the model, discrete event simulation was applied to simulate patients’ trajectories and states of a hospital under four seismic scenarios, where patient visits are 1.4, 1.6, 1.9, and 2.3 times the normal number. A healthcare performance index, Crowdedness Index (CI), is proposed to measure crowdedness on a daily basis, which is defined as the ratio of the average waiting time for treatment to the recommended maximal waiting time. Results of simulations rendered the establishment of empirical equations, describing the relation between the maximum CIs and the patient growth ratios. In the most severe case in this study, the maximum CI exceeds 92 and it takes 10 days to recover from the quality drop. This highlights the problem a general emergency responsibility hospital may encounter if no emergency response measure is implemented. Findings are provided pertaining to the predication of a recovery curve and the alarming level of patient increase, which are supportive information for preparedness planning as well as response measure formulation to improve resilience.
- Subjects :
- Emergency Medical Services
Index (economics)
Critical Care and Emergency Medicine
Health Care Providers
0211 other engineering and technologies
02 engineering and technology
Geographical Locations
Health care
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
Medicine and Health Sciences
Medicine
Medical Personnel
media_common
021103 operations research
Multidisciplinary
Simulation and Modeling
Overcrowding
Professions
Physical Sciences
020201 artificial intelligence & image processing
Medical emergency
Emergency Service, Hospital
Research Article
Asia
Science
media_common.quotation_subject
Taiwan
Medical Services
Research and Analysis Methods
Physicians
Earthquakes
First Aid
Humans
Quality (business)
Resilience (network)
business.industry
medicine.disease
Probability Theory
Probability Distribution
Crowding
Triage
Health Care
Health Care Facilities
People and Places
Population Groupings
business
Delivery of Health Care
Mathematics
First aid
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 16
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PloS one
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6804ebba5ea776bfccc8f6bd9df5ce4c