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Open Access Journal of
eISSN: 2576-4578

Translational Medicine & Research

Mini Review Volume 2 Issue 3

Optimization of surgical referrals to minimize cost

Kambiz Farahmand, Satpal Singh Wadhwa

North Dakota State University, USA

Correspondence: Kambiz Farahmand, Professor, North Dakota State University, 1410 14th Ave N, Fargo, ND 58102, USA, Tel 701-231-5694

Received: April 18, 2018 | Published: May 7, 2018

Citation: Farahmand K, Wadhwa SS. Optimization of surgical referrals to minimize cost. Open Access J Trans Med Res. 2018;2(3):92-94. DOI: 10.15406/oajtmr.2018.02.00044

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Keywords

surgical referrals, podiatry surgeries, orthopedic

Introduction

The main region for this study includes all of New Mexico and West Texas, which is mainly served by the Albuquerque surgical department located in Albuquerque New Mexico. The focus of this study is on the surgical referrals to the Albuquerque surgical suite from three main areas including West Texas, North Albuquerque and South Albuquerque.

Albuquerque hospital serves an area, which includes all of New Mexico, Arizona and West Texas area.  There are two level one facilities in this region serving the patients who need access to surgery.  One facility is located in Tucson, which serves patients in Arizona and one in Albuquerque, which serves patients in New Mexico and West Texas. Patients who live in Southern or Northern New Mexico and West Texas who require non-emergency surgery are referred to the Albuquerque Medical Center surgical department.  All emergency surgeries are referred to the nearest clinic or hospital with surgical capability for the procedure provided fee-care availability.  

The Albuquerque Medical Center surgical Department not only serves the surgical needs of the local and nearby community, but also has to schedule all non-emergency referrals from the rest of New Mexico and West Texas.  The Surgical Department follows a block schedule for various departments accessing the nine OR rooms. Two departments, which have significant non-emergency surgical referrals from outside Albuquerque, include Orthopedic and Podiatry surgeries.  Orthopedic department has been allocated four surgical rooms on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays for a total of 82 hours of access per week to OR.  The Podiatry has been allocated three surgical rooms on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays for a total of 19 hours of access per week to OR.

The referral patients will also have pre and post-surgery visits to the Albuquerque Medical center and in most cases, travel is reimbursed.  Considering the volume of referral patients for these departments and the cost associated with the referrals, it may be feasible to build additional clinics or Medical centers with surgical capability in areas such as West Texas or other locations in Albuquerque.

It is the purpose of this project to simulate and determine the actual cost associated with surgical referrals to the Albuquerque surgical department for the said procedures and to analyze the feasibility of increased capability specifically in orthopedic and Podiatry surgery within the referral area. From analyzing the hospital admission data, it was found that there are 8678 patients that will not receive reimbursement at all for all procedures and 1997 patients get full reimbursement for all procedures. This shows that the patients are not reimbursed might not fit in the reimbursement policy and those getting full reimbursement for the different procedures on the same day might be falling in some special criteria of the reimbursement policy. Furthermore, the procedures reimbursed may also carry different weights as per reimbursement policy. This concludes that the variations in the procedures types and the patient with respect to reimbursement could not be ignored for cost modeling. Therefore, the management should provide the details of the reimbursement policy.1,2

Methodology

Once the data is validated for reimbursement policies by the management the K means clustering is done to get the optimal clusters and to find the location of new health care facility. Based on previous clustering using two specified initial seeds at Amarillo and Albuquerque the following patient demographic map was obtained (Figures 1–3).

Figure 1 A new clustering scheme was obtained based on an additional two random initial seeds.
Figure 2 Another cluster was obtain shown below, based on an additional two random initial seeds and adding the constraint of only three clusters.
Figure 3 Finally, the optimization model could be used to decide between the various alternative.

Finally, the optimization model could be used to decide between the various alternative. Table below shows the distributions depicting distances from each cluster to Albuquerque for patient’s admission, consultation, and procedures performed (Tables 1–6).3,4

 

 

Original

Adjusted

Orthopedic

Cluster 1

-0.5 + EXPO(1.97)

-0.5 + EXPO(1.5)

Cluster 2

No patients admitted

No patients admitted

Cluster 3

-0.5 + 18* BETA(0.886, 4.27)

-0.5 + 18* BETA(0.703, 4.27)

Cluster 4

-0.5 + GAMM(6.33, 1.19)

-0.5 + GAMM(5.275, 1.19)

Cluster 5

4 + WEIB(41.4, 0.54)

4 + WEIB(41.4, 0.54)

Podiatry

Cluster 1

-0.5 + WEIB(8.88, 1.12)

-0.5 + WEIB(7.4, 1.12)

Cluster 2

No patients admitted

No patients admitted

Cluster 3

-0.001 + 107* BETA(0.349, 0.717)

-0.001 + 107* BETA(0.1, 0.717)

Cluster 4

33 + GAMM(445, 0.248)

33 + GAMM(445, 0.248)

 

Cluster 5

Constant 443

-0.5 + 91* BETA(8.17, 0.1)

Table 1 Distribution of patients for each cluster

Consultation

Simulation

Actual 

Percentage error 

Total Number

11428.23

15357

-25.58%

Total Number Reimbursed

4086.07

15311.7

-73.31%

Consultation Total Cost

$326,276.36

 

 

Table 2 Results using rate for consultation

Procedure

Simulation

 Actual 

Percentage error

Total Number

53573.8

75485

-29.03%

Total Number Reimbursed

19598.6

31814.1358

-38.40%

Procedure Total Cost

$1,367,321.83

 

 

Table 3 Results using rate for procedure

Admission

Simulation

 Actual 

 Percentage error

Total Number

728.23

1021

-28.67%

Total Number Reimbursed

353.2

1021

-65.41%

Admission Total Cost

$39,372.35

 

 

Table 4 Results using rate for admits

Total

 Simulation

 Actual 

Percentage error

Total number of observation

65,730

91863

-28.45%

Total cost

$1,732,970.55

$2272990.77

-23.76%

Total number reimbursed

24,037.87

20456

17.51%

Table 5 Results using rate for all patients

Resource

Scheduled utilization

Percentage idle

OR1

0.101932

89.81

OR3

0.183589

81.64

OR4

0.123607

87.64

OR7

0.123607

87.64

Surgeon 1, ORTHO, R3

0.123607

87.64

Surgeon 1, ORTHO, R7

0.089855

91.01

Surgeon 2, ORTHO, R3

0.03821

96.18

Surgeon 2, ORTHO, R4

0.015987

98.4

Surgeon 3, POD, R1

0.037596

96.24

Surgeon 3, POD, R3

0.02983

97.02

Surgeon 3, POD, R7

0.010964

98.9

Surgeon 4, ORTHO

0.057574

94.24

Surgeon 5, ORTHO, R3

0.084316

91.57

Surgeon 6, ORTHO, R7

0.032637

96.74

Surgeon 7, ORTHO, R1

0

100

Surgeon 7, ORTHO, R7

0.04327

95.67

Surgeon 8, ORTHO, R7

0.044496

95.55

Surgeon 9, ORTHO, R3

0.044828

95.52

Table 6 Idle percentages for the resources

Conclusion

The simulation results show that a podiatry patient has to wait 28.5% of the time an orthopedic patient would have to wait equivalent to an average 11.2 hours. The actual amount of time waited is of less importance because the simulation generates admission arrival based solely on the designated hourly arrival rate for a given cluster; it does not consider the time of the day, hence, an admission arrival could happen right after the operation rooms are closed for the day, and the patient would have to wait until the next day for an available operation room. The admission arrival was not modeled to happen only during a more realistic, limited time of the day because there is not enough information on the specific time a patient might arrive in reality. Waiting time is calculated in general for orthopedic patients and podiatry patients; waiting time for a specific operation room is unknown because the patients are modeled to wait for any available operation room, hence, they will not be waiting in the queue of a specific operation room.

All Surgeons had an extremely high idle time above 80% of the scheduled time. As for operation rooms, Operation room 1 has the highest idle time at 88.36% of its scheduled time. The best performing operation room was operation room 3 with 75.41% idle time. However, the simulation did not consider the time the operation room is being prepared for the operation or being cleaned up after the operation. Still, these idle percentages are extremely high. Arena Simulation software was used to replicate the arrival of patients for admission, consultation and procedures. The software successfully generated the patients’ arrivals with percentage error -0.90%. The simulation results indicating an imbalance between the availability of the resources and patients’ arrivals, causing an extremely high idle time. Moreover, the results also showed an imbalance between the resources dedicated to orthopedic patients and podiatry patients; podiatry patients are less in number but they wait longer than orthopedic patients do.

Acknowledgements

None.

Conflict of interest

Author declares no conflict of interest.

References

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©2018 Farahmand, et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.