医院服务的供需匹配

D. Gupta, S. Potthoff
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引用次数: 8

摘要

医院几乎就是医疗保健服务系统的代名词。他们提供三种主要类型的服务:外科服务、急诊服务和住院服务。此外,一些医院设有门诊诊所和设施,在门诊的基础上提供专家会诊和手术服务。在保持服务质量和保持低成本的同时,医院管理者在匹配医院服务的供需方面面临什么挑战?运营管理(OM)文献在多大程度上以及如何有助于解决这些挑战?实践中的新趋势是什么?它们给OM研究人员带来了哪些机遇和额外的挑战?这本专著是作者试图解决上面提出的问题。虽然服务能力可以很好地根据物质和人力资源的数量来定义,但我们选择将重点放在医院提供的三种主要服务类型上。在这样做的过程中,我们暴露了这些服务的相互联系,以及由于任何一个领域的不匹配对所有其他医院业务的级联效应而产生的挑战。我们的目标是从实践者的角度揭示关键问题,使用具有代表性的数据来突出可以使用运营管理工具进行建模的问题,总结此类问题建模的最新技术,并确定未来研究的机会。该专著强调了几个重要的观察结果。首先,医院管理者需要考虑影响医院内外服务需求和供应的力量。具体地说,经常未得到充分利用的塑造和平滑服务需求的选择可能提供重要的新机会,以降低匹配需求和供应的成本。其次,医院既需要根据历史数据中观察到的模式进行仔细的预先规划,也需要动态的应对策略,以应对不断变化的现实,这些现实迫使人们不可避免地偏离计划。有效的动态反应可能需要管理人员投资于与其他医院建立联盟和灵活性(例如,特遣队人员)。第三,医院的角色正在发生变化。支付机制的创新将向医院和医生提供捆绑付款,并提供降低成本的激励措施,因此需要设计和实施有效的收益分享计划。这些力量也增加了医院管理人员选择适当数量和专业化的受薪医生,以及与上游(如初级保健诊所)和下游(如熟练护理机构)服务提供者建立联盟的重要性。OM的研究人员已经解决了其中的一些问题,但重要的新机会比比皆是。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Matching Supply and Demand for Hospital Services
Hospitals are nearly synonymous with the idea of a healthcare delivery system. They provide three main types of services: surgical services, emergency services, and inpatient services. In addition, some hospitals have outpatient clinics and facilities in which specialist consults and surgical services are provided on an outpatient basis. What challenges do hospital managers face in matching supply and demand for hospital services while maintaining service quality and keeping costs low? To what extent and how has the Operations Management (OM) literature contributed to addressing these challenges? What are emerging trends in practice? What opportunities and additional challenges do they pose for the OM researchers? This monograph is the authors’ attempt to address the questions posed above. Although service capacity could very well be defined in terms of the numerical count of physical and human resources, we have chosen to focus on the three main types of services that hospitals provide. In doing so, we expose the interconnectedness of these services and the challenges that arise due to the cascading effects of mismatches in any one area on all other hospital operations. Our goal is to expose key issues from practitioner perspectives, use representative data to highlight problems that are amenable to modeling using operations management tools, summarize state of the art in modeling such problems, and identify opportunities for future research. The monograph underscores several important observations. First, hospital administrators need to consider forces affecting demand and supply for services both inside and outside the hospital walls. Specifically, the option to shape and smooth demand for services, which is often underutilized, may provide significant new opportunities to lower the cost of matching demand and supply. Second, hospitals need both careful advance planning, based on patterns observed in historical data, as well as dynamic response strategies to unfolding reality that forces inevitable deviations from plans. Effective dynamic response may require administrators to invest in building alliances with other hospitals and flexibility (e.g. contingent staff). Third, the role of hospitals is changing. Innovations in payment mechanisms that bundle payment to hospitals and doctors, and offer incentives for lowering costs, are creating the need to design and implement effective gainsharing plans. These same forces have also increased the importance for hospital administrators of choosing the right number and specialization of salaried physicians, and building alliances with both upstream (e.g. primary care clinics) and downstream (e.g. skilled nursing facilities) service providers. OM researchers have addressed some of these topics, but significant new opportunities abound.
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来源期刊
Foundations and Trends in Technology, Information and Operations Management
Foundations and Trends in Technology, Information and Operations Management Decision Sciences-Management Science and Operations Research
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