The Patient Flow Effect of Pandemic Policies: A Hybrid Simulation Study in a Norwegian Emergency Department

Healthcare (Basel). 2022 Dec 20;11(1):1. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11010001.

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic required several interventions within emergency departments, complicating the patient flow. This study explores the effect of intervention policies on patient flow in emergency departments under pandemic conditions. The patient flow interventions under evaluation here are the addition of extra treatment rooms and the addition of a waiting zone. A predeveloped hybrid simulation model was used to conduct five scenarios: (1) pre-pandemic patient flow, (2) patient flow with a 20% contamination rate, (3) adding extra treatment rooms to patient flow, (4) adding a waiting zone to the patient flow, (5) adding extra treatment rooms and a waiting zone to the patient flow. Experiments were examined based on multiple patient flow metrics incorporated into the model. Running the scenarios showed that introducing the extra treatment rooms improved all the patient flow parameters. Adding the waiting zone further improved only the contaminated patient flow parameters. Still, the benefit of achieving this must be weighed against the disadvantage for ordinary patients. Introducing the waiting zone in addition to the extra treatment room has one positive effect, decreasing time that the treatment rooms are blocked for contaminated patients entering the treatment room.

Keywords: agent-based hybrid model; computerized simulation modeling; emergency department; healthcare; multi-agent hybrid model; pandemic decision support; patient flow.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.