Literature DB >> 18042870

Coordination of appointments for anesthesia care outside of operating rooms using an enterprise-wide scheduling system.

Franklin Dexter1, Yan Xiao, Angella J Dow, Melissa M Strader, Danny Ho, Ruth E Wachtel.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: An anesthesia department implemented scheduling of anesthetics outside of operating rooms (non-OR) by clerks and nurses from other departments using its hospital's enterprise-wide scheduling system.
METHODS: Observational studies chronicled the change over 2 yr as non-OR time was allocated by specialty, and nonanesthesia clerks and nurses scheduled anesthesia teams. Experimental studies investigated how tabular and graphical displays affected the scheduling of milestones (e.g., NPO times) and appointments before anesthetics.
RESULTS: Anesthetics performed in allocated time increased progressively from 0% to 75%. Scheduling of anesthetics by nonanesthesia clerks and nurses increased progressively from 0% to 77%. Consistency of patient instructions was improved. The quality of resulting schedules was good. Implementation was not associated with worsening of multiple operational measures of performance such as cancellation rates, turnover times, or complaints. However, schedulers struggled to understand fasting and arrival times of patients, despite using a web site with statistically generated values in tabular formats. Experiments revealed that people ignored their knowledge that anesthetics can start earlier than scheduled. Participants made good decisions with both tabular and graphical displays when scheduling appointments preceding anesthesia.
CONCLUSIONS: Enterprise-wide scheduling can coordinate anesthetics with other appointments on the same date and improve consistency and accuracy of patient instructions customized to the probability of an anesthetic starting early. The usefulness of implementation depends on the value in having more patient-centered care and/or in having patients arrive just in time for non-OR anesthesia, surgery, or regional block placement (e.g., at facilities with limited physical space).

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18042870     DOI: 10.1213/01.ane.0000287686.23187.3f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesth Analg        ISSN: 0003-2999            Impact factor:   5.108


  4 in total

1.  Overutilization and underutilization of operating rooms - insights from behavioral health care operations management.

Authors:  Andreas Fügener; Sebastian Schiffels; Rainer Kolisch
Journal:  Health Care Manag Sci       Date:  2015-10-03

2.  Changing Anesthesia Block Allocations Improves Endoscopy Suite Efficiency.

Authors:  Mitchell H Tsai; Michael A Hall; Melanie S Cardinal; Max W Breidenstein; Michael J Abajian; Richard S Zubarik
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2019-11-15       Impact factor: 4.460

3.  Event-based knowledge elicitation of operating room management decision-making using scenarios adapted from information systems data.

Authors:  Franklin Dexter; Ruth E Wachtel; Richard H Epstein
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2011-01-07       Impact factor: 2.796

4.  Strategies for daily operating room management of ambulatory surgery centers following resolution of the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Franklin Dexter; Mohamed Elhakim; Randy W Loftus; Melinda S Seering; Richard H Epstein
Journal:  J Clin Anesth       Date:  2020-04-29       Impact factor: 9.452

  4 in total

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