Timing It Right: Balancing Inpatient Congestion vs. Readmission Risk at Discharge
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Shi, Pengyi; Helm, Jonathan E.; Deglise-Hawkinson, Jivan; Pan, Julian
署名单位:
Purdue University System; Purdue University; Indiana University System; IU Kelley School of Business; Indiana University Bloomington
刊物名称:
OPERATIONS RESEARCH
ISSN/ISSBN:
0030-364X
DOI:
10.1287/opre.2020.2044
发表日期:
2021
页码:
1842-1865
关键词:
hospital readmissions
econometric-analysis
dynamic control
care
allocation
decisions
capacity
systems
length
MODEL
摘要:
When to discharge a patient plays an important role in hospital patient flow management and the quality of care and patient outcomes. In this work, we develop and implement a data-integrated decision support framework to aid hospitals in managing the delicate balance between readmission risk at discharge and ward congestion. We formulate a large-scale Markov decision process (MDP) that integrates a personalized readmission prediction model to dynamically prescribe both how many and which patients to discharge on each day. Because of patient heterogeneity and the fact that length of stay is not memoryless, the MDP has the curse of dimensionality. We leverage structural properties and an analytical solution for a special cost setting to transform the MDP into a univariate optimization; this leads to a novel, efficient dynamic heuristic. Furthermore, for our decision framework to be implementable in practice, we build a unified prediction model that integrates several statistical methods and provides key inputs to the decision framework; existing off-the-shelf readmission prediction models alone could not adequately parametrize our decision support. Through extensive counterfactual analyses, we demonstrate the value of our discharge decision tool over our partner hospital's historical discharge behavior. We also obtain generalizable insights by applying the tool to a broad range of hospital types through a high-fidelity simulation. Last, we showcase an implementation of our tool at our partner hospital to demonstrate broader applicability through our framework's plug-and-play design for integration with general hospital data systems and workflows.