TY - JOUR T1 - Evaluating the effects of increasing surgical volume on emergency department patient access JF - BMJ Quality & Safety JO - BMJ Qual Saf SP - 146 LP - 152 DO - 10.1136/bmjqs.2008.030007 VL - 20 IS - 2 AU - S Levin AU - R Dittus AU - D Aronsky AU - M Weinger AU - D France Y1 - 2011/02/01 UR - http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/20/2/146.abstract N2 - Aim To determine how increases in surgical patient volume will affect emergency department (ED) access to inpatient cardiac services. To compare how strategies to increase cardiology inpatient throughput can either accommodate increases in surgical volume or improve ED patient access.Methods A stochastic discrete event simulation was created to model patient flow through a cardiology inpatient system within a US, urban, academic hospital. The simulation used survival analysis to examine the relationship between anticipated increases in surgical volume and ED patient boarding time (ie, time interval from cardiology admission request to inpatient bed placement).Results ED patients boarded for a telemetry and cardiovascular intensive care unit (CVICU) bed had a mean boarding time of 5.3 (median 3.1, interquartile range 1.5–6.9) h and 2.7 (median 1.7, interquartile range 0.8–3.0) h, respectively. Each 10% incremental increase in surgical volume resulted in a 37 and 33 min increase in mean boarding time to the telemetry unit and CVICU, respectively. Strategies to increase cardiology inpatient throughput by increasing capacity and decreasing length of stay for specific inpatients was compared. Increasing cardiology capacity by one telemetry and CVICU bed or decreasing length of stay by 1 h resulted in a 7–9 min decrease in average boarding time or an 11–19% increase in surgical patient volume accommodation.Conclusions Simulating competition dynamics for hospital admissions provides prospective planning (ie, decision making) information and demonstrates how interventions to increase inpatient throughput will have a much greater effect on higher priority surgical admissions compared with ED admissions. ER -