ICU admission control: an empirical study of capacity allocation and its implication for patient outcomes
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2015Metadata
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Song Hee, Kim
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ICU admission control: an empirical study of capacity allocation and its implication for patient outcomes
Abstract
This work examines the process of admission to a hospital’s intensive care unit (ICU). ICUs currently lack
systematic admission criteria, largely because the impact of ICU admission on patient outcomes has not
been well quantified. This makes evaluating the performance of candidate admission strategies difficult. Using
a large patient-level data set of more than 190,000 hospitalizations across 15 hospitals, we first quantify the cost
of denied ICU admission for a number of patient outcomes. We use hospital operational factors as instrumental
variables to handle the endogeneity of the admission decisions and identify important specification issues that
are required for this approach to be valid. Using the quantified cost estimates, we then provide a simulation
framework for evaluating various admission strategies’ performance. By simulating a hospital with 21 ICU beds,
we find that we could save about $1.9 million per year by using an optimal policy based on observables designed
to reduce readmissions and hospital length of stay. We also discuss the role of unobserved patient factors, which
physicians may discretionarily account for when making admission decisions, and show that including these
unobservables could result in a more than threefold increase in benefits compared to just optimizing the policy
over the observable patient factors.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
INFORMS MSOM Society
National Science Foundation [CAREER Award]
CMMI-1350059
Instituto Sistemas Complejos de Ingenieria
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Management Science Vol. 61, No. 1, January 2015, pp. 19–38
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