Patient coordination during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Amsterdam region: effects on capacity utilization and patient flow
E. Berkeveld, M. D. F. Rhebergen, F. W. Bloemers, H. R. Zandbergen, G. G. van Merode

TL;DR
This study shows that coordinating patient distribution during the pandemic helped balance hospital capacity and improve patient flow in the Amsterdam region.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the effectiveness of centralized patient coordination in managing hospital capacity during a health crisis.
Findings
Centralized coordination reduced hospital utilization above 100% in some hospitals during the first cohort.
Coordination improved utilization in most hospitals that were underutilized without coordination.
Load-balancing through coordination led to better distribution of patient care demand.
Abstract
To manage COVID-19 surge demand, Dutch regional and national task forces were installed to coordinate a proportionate patient distribution. This study examined the effect of centralized COVID-19 patient coordination on hospital capacity utilization during the pandemic. A retrospective observational double cohort study compared intra- and interregional patient coordination by the regional task force ROAZ Noord-Holland Flevoland. Coordination was compared to a simulated scenario without coordination based on a queueing model during two time periods from January 1, 2021, until May 1, 2021 and from August 1, 2021, until December 1, 2021. Daily data on patient ICU and clinical COVID-19 patient transfers, number of admissions, and capacity were assessed. The primary outcome was hospital capacity utilization. Overall, 1,213 patients were transferred both within the eleven regional hospitals…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare Operations and Scheduling Optimization · Healthcare Policy and Management · COVID-19 epidemiological studies
