Forecasting Hospital Daily Occupancy Using Patient Journey Data - A Heuristic Approach

Hospitals are dynamic environments that involve many stochastic processes. Each day, some patients are discharged from hospital, emergency patients arrive and require admission, and a variable number of elective admissions are planned for the day. The ability to forecast hospital occupancy will assi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAdvanced Data Mining and Applications Vol. 11323; pp. 150 - 159
Main Authors Qin, Shaowen, Ward, Dale
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Springer International Publishing AG 2018
Springer International Publishing
SeriesLecture Notes in Computer Science
Subjects
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Summary:Hospitals are dynamic environments that involve many stochastic processes. Each day, some patients are discharged from hospital, emergency patients arrive and require admission, and a variable number of elective admissions are planned for the day. The ability to forecast hospital occupancy will assist hospital managers to balance the supply and demand on inpatient beds on a daily basis, which in turn will reduce the risk of hospital congestion. This study employed a heuristic approach to derive a forecasting model based on hospital patient journey data. Instead of using estimated overall length of stay (LOS) for each patient, the forecasting model relies on daily evaluation of the probabilities of staying or being discharged based on a patient’s current LOS. Patients’ characteristics are introduced as additional model parameters in an incremental manner to balance model complexity and prediction accuracy. It was found that a model without enough details can provide indications of overall trends in terms of the mean occupancy. However, more parameters, such as day of the week, must be considered in order to capture the extremes present in the data. Of course, as more parameters are introduced, less data become available for meaningful analysis. This proof-of-concept study provides a demonstration of a heuristic approach to determine how complex a model needs to be and what factors are important when forecasting hospital occupancy.
Bibliography:This work was supported by the ARC linkage grant LP130100323, jointly awarded to Flinders University, the Southern Adelaide Health Service (Flinders Medical Centre) and the Central Adelaide Local Health Network (Royal Adelaide Hospital).
ISBN:9783030050894
3030050890
ISSN:0302-9743
1611-3349
DOI:10.1007/978-3-030-05090-0_13