Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing (Apr 2022)

Evaluating Different Strategies on the Blood Collection Counter Settings to Improve Patient Waiting Time in Outpatient Units

  • Chih-Hao Chen MS,
  • Yao-Te Tsai PhD,
  • Chun-An Chou PhD,
  • Shao-Jen Weng PhD,
  • Wen-Chin Lee MD, PhD,
  • Li-Wei Hsiao MD,
  • Natan Derek PhD,
  • Chang-Pu Ko MS

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/00469580221095797
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59

Abstract

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Long patient waiting time is one of the major problems in the healthcare system and it would decrease patient satisfaction. Previous studies usually investigated how to improve the treatment flow in order to reduce patient waiting time or length of stay. The studies on blood collection counters have received less attention. Therefore, the objective of this study is to reduce the patient waiting time at outpatient clinics for metabolism and nephrology outpatients. A discrete-event simulation is used to analyze the four different strategies for blood collection counter resource allocation. Through analyzing four different strategic settings, the experimental results revealed that the maximum number of patients waiting before the outpatient clinics was reduced from 41 to 33 (20%); the maximum patient waiti-ng time at the outpatient clinics was decreased from 201.6 minutes to 83 minutes (59%). In this study, we found that adjusting the settings of blood collection counters would be beneficial. Assigning one exclusive blood collection counter from 8 to 10 am is the most suitable option with the least impact on the operational process for hospital staff. The results provide managerial insight regarding the cost-effective strategy selection for the hospital operational strategy.