DocumentCode
798529
Title
A Stochastic Mathematical Appointment Overbooking Model for Healthcare Providers to Improve Profits
Author
Kim, Seongmoon ; Giachetti, Ronald E.
Author_Institution
Yonsei Sch. of Bus., Yonsei Univ., Seoul
Volume
36
Issue
6
fYear
2006
Firstpage
1211
Lastpage
1219
Abstract
This paper develops a stochastic mathematical overbooking model (SMOM) for determining the optimal number of patient appointments to accept to maximize expected total profits for diverse healthcare environments. Overbooking is necessary to alleviate the detrimental effects of no-shows that are experienced by healthcare providers. Compared with traditional simple deterministic overbooking approaches, SMOM is unique since it considers the probability distributions of no-shows and walk-ins to obtain the optimal solution. Usually, healthcare providers would only have no-show data based on their current practices, so the authors provide a method to extrapolate the conditional probability to estimate what happens when overbooking occurs. SMOM is then compared with two alternative strategies: the base case of no overbooking and the naive statistical overbooking approach (NSOA) that simply adds the mean number of no-shows minus the mean number of walk-ins to the number of appointments to accept. It is shown using data collected for 59 physicians in a medical clinic that SMOM compared with the base case can increase profits by 43.72% on average whereas NSOA improves profits by 29.66% on average. Sensitivity analyses demonstrate SMOM is robust under a diversity of healthcare environments and cost structures
Keywords
health care; scheduling; stochastic processes; appointment scheduling; healthcare providers; naive statistical overbooking approach; patient appointments; probability distributions; stochastic mathematical overbooking model; Costs; Job shop scheduling; Mathematical model; Medical services; Probability distribution; Resource management; Robustness; Sensitivity analysis; Stochastic processes; Systems engineering and theory; Appointment scheduling; healthcare; overbooking; revenue management;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1083-4427
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TSMCA.2006.878970
Filename
1715489
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