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To pool or not to pool in hospitals: a theoretical andpractical comparison for a radiotherapy outpatient department
This paper examines whether urgent and regular patients waiting for a consultation at a radiotherapy outpatient department should be pooled or not. Both queuing theory and discrete event simulation were applied to a realistic case study. The theoretical approach shows that pooling is not always bene...
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Published in: | Annals of operations research 2010-07, Vol.178 (1), p.77-89 |
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container_title | Annals of operations research |
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creator | Joustra, Paul Sluis, Erik Dijk, Nico M |
description | This paper examines whether urgent and regular patients waiting for a consultation at a radiotherapy outpatient department should be pooled or not. Both queuing theory and discrete event simulation were applied to a realistic case study. The theoretical approach shows that pooling is not always beneficial with regard to the waiting times of urgent patients. Furthermore, the practical approach indicates that the separation of queues may require less capacity to meet the waiting time performance target for urgent as well as regular patients. The results seem to be of general interest for hospitals. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s10479-009-0559-7 |
format | article |
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issn | 0254-5330 1572-9338 |
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source | ABI/INFORM Global (ProQuest); Springer Link; BSC - Ebsco (Business Source Ultimate) |
subjects | Consultation Hospitals Operations research Patients Pools Queueing theory Radiotherapy Simulation |
title | To pool or not to pool in hospitals: a theoretical andpractical comparison for a radiotherapy outpatient department |
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