A discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the United Kingdom

Abstract Background The number of people affected by cataract in the United Kingdom (UK) is growing rapidly due to ageing population. As the only way to treat cataract is through surgery, there is a high demand for this type of surgery and figures indicate that it is the most performed type of surge...

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Main Authors: Eren Demir, David Southern, Syed Rashid, Reda Lebcir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3741-2
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spelling doaj-b7f2948d5c1c406ba80845f574874cd92020-11-25T01:52:35ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632018-12-0118111510.1186/s12913-018-3741-2A discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the United KingdomEren Demir0David Southern1Syed Rashid2Reda Lebcir3University of HertfordshirePathways CommunicationsJohnson & Johnson VisionUniversity of HertfordshireAbstract Background The number of people affected by cataract in the United Kingdom (UK) is growing rapidly due to ageing population. As the only way to treat cataract is through surgery, there is a high demand for this type of surgery and figures indicate that it is the most performed type of surgery in the UK. The National Health Service (NHS), which provides free of charge care in the UK, is under huge financial pressure due to budget austerity in the last decade. As the number of people affected by the disease is expected to grow significantly in coming years, the aim of this study is to evaluate whether the introduction of new processes and medical technologies will enable cataract services to cope with the demand within the NHS funding constraints. Methods We developed a Discrete Event Simulation model representing the cataract services pathways at Leicester Royal Infirmary Hospital. The model was inputted with data from national and local sources as well as from a surgery demand forecasting model developed in the study. The model was verified and validated with the participation of the cataract services clinical and management teams. Results Four scenarios involving increased number of surgeries per half-day surgery theatre slot were simulated. Results indicate that the total number of surgeries per year could be increased by 40% at no extra cost. However, the rate of improvement decreases for increased number of surgeries per half-day surgery theatre slot due to a higher number of cancelled surgeries. Productivity is expected to improve as the total number of doctors and nurses hours will increase by 5 and 12% respectively. However, non-human resources such as pre-surgery rooms and post-surgery recovery chairs are under-utilized across all scenarios. Conclusions Using new processes and medical technologies for cataract surgery is a promising way to deal with the expected higher demand especially as this could be achieved with limited impact on costs. Non-human resources capacity need to be evenly levelled across the surgery pathway to improve their utilisation. The performance of cataract services could be improved by better communication with and proactive management of patients.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3741-2CataractHealth operations managementDiscrete event simulationNational Health ServiceUnited Kingdom
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eren Demir
David Southern
Syed Rashid
Reda Lebcir
spellingShingle Eren Demir
David Southern
Syed Rashid
Reda Lebcir
A discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the United Kingdom
BMC Health Services Research
Cataract
Health operations management
Discrete event simulation
National Health Service
United Kingdom
author_facet Eren Demir
David Southern
Syed Rashid
Reda Lebcir
author_sort Eren Demir
title A discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the United Kingdom
title_short A discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the United Kingdom
title_full A discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the United Kingdom
title_fullStr A discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the United Kingdom
title_full_unstemmed A discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the United Kingdom
title_sort discrete event simulation model to evaluate the treatment pathways of patients with cataract in the united kingdom
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract Background The number of people affected by cataract in the United Kingdom (UK) is growing rapidly due to ageing population. As the only way to treat cataract is through surgery, there is a high demand for this type of surgery and figures indicate that it is the most performed type of surgery in the UK. The National Health Service (NHS), which provides free of charge care in the UK, is under huge financial pressure due to budget austerity in the last decade. As the number of people affected by the disease is expected to grow significantly in coming years, the aim of this study is to evaluate whether the introduction of new processes and medical technologies will enable cataract services to cope with the demand within the NHS funding constraints. Methods We developed a Discrete Event Simulation model representing the cataract services pathways at Leicester Royal Infirmary Hospital. The model was inputted with data from national and local sources as well as from a surgery demand forecasting model developed in the study. The model was verified and validated with the participation of the cataract services clinical and management teams. Results Four scenarios involving increased number of surgeries per half-day surgery theatre slot were simulated. Results indicate that the total number of surgeries per year could be increased by 40% at no extra cost. However, the rate of improvement decreases for increased number of surgeries per half-day surgery theatre slot due to a higher number of cancelled surgeries. Productivity is expected to improve as the total number of doctors and nurses hours will increase by 5 and 12% respectively. However, non-human resources such as pre-surgery rooms and post-surgery recovery chairs are under-utilized across all scenarios. Conclusions Using new processes and medical technologies for cataract surgery is a promising way to deal with the expected higher demand especially as this could be achieved with limited impact on costs. Non-human resources capacity need to be evenly levelled across the surgery pathway to improve their utilisation. The performance of cataract services could be improved by better communication with and proactive management of patients.
topic Cataract
Health operations management
Discrete event simulation
National Health Service
United Kingdom
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3741-2
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