Optimal Two-Tier Outpatient Care Network Redesign With a Real-World Case Study of Shanghai

Yewen Deng, Na Li, Nan Kong, Zhibin Jiang, Xiaoqing Xie

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal

Abstract

Healthcare capacity shortage contributes to poor access in many countries. Moreover, rapid urbanization often occurring in these countries has exacerbated the imbalance between healthcare capacity and need. One way to address the above challenge is expanding the total capacity and redistributing the capacity spatially. In this research, we studied the problem of locating new hospitals in a two-tier outpatient care system comprising multiple central and district hospitals, and upgrading existing district hospitals to central hospitals. We formulated the problem with a discrete location optimization model. To parameterize the optimization model, we used a multinomial logit model to characterize individual patients' diverse hospital choice and to quantify the patient arrival rates at each hospital accordingly. To solve the hard nonlinear combinatorial optimization problem, we developed a queueing network model to approximate the impact of hospital locations on patient flows. We then proposed a multi-fidelity optimization approach, which involves both the aforementioned queuing network model as a surrogate and a self-developed stochastic simulation as the high-fidelity model. With a real-world case study of Shanghai, we demonstrated the changes in the care network and examined the impacts on the network design by population center emergence, governmental budget change and considering patients with different age groups or income levels. Note to Practitioners - Our work focuses on improving system-wide care access in a two-tier care network. We believe that our work can lead to effective development of a location analytics tool for city-wide healthcare system planners. We also think the importance of this study is further strengthened by the case studies based on real-world hospital choice experimental data from Shanghai, China, a region suffering from the imbalance between healthcare capacity and need. Our case studies are expected to make recommendations on care facility expansion and dispersion to better align with the spatial distribution of residential communities and patient hospital choice behavior.
© 2004-2012 IEEE.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2836 - 2854
JournalIEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering
Volume20
Issue number4
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Behavioral science;Case-studies;Location optimization;Multi-fidelity optimization;Network design;Optimisations;Patient choice;Real-world;Two tiers;Urban areas;

Keywords

  • Behavioral research
  • Budget control
  • Combinatorial optimization
  • Health care
  • Location
  • Population statistics
  • Queueing networks
  • Queueing theory
  • Stochastic models
  • Stochastic systems

Indexed by

  • SCIE

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