IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

Managing Operating Room Cost in Cardiac Surgery with Three Process Interventions

Managing Operating Room Cost in Cardiac Surgery with Three Process Interventions
View Sample PDF
Author(s): Antti Peltokorpi (Helsinki University of Technology, Finland), Juha-Matti Lehtonen (Helsinki University of Technology, Finland), Jaakko Kujala (Helsinki University of Technology, Finland)and Juhani Kouri (Kuopio University Hospital, Finland)
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 8
Source title: Encyclopedia of Healthcare Information Systems
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Nilmini Wickramasinghe (Illinois Institute of Technology, USA)and Eliezer Geisler (Illinois Institute of Technology, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-889-5.ch104

Purchase

View Managing Operating Room Cost in Cardiac Surgery with Three Process Interventions on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

Healthcare providers in both public and private sectors are facing increasing pressure to improve their cost efficiency and productivity. The increasing cost of new technological solutions has enforced to apply operations management techniques developed for industrial and service processes. Meyer’s (2004) review of existing research shows that, on average, operating rooms (ORs) operate only at 68% of capacity. Using OR time efficiently is especially challenging when long operations are scheduled to fixed OR block time. This situation is typical in open heart surgeries, where a high variability in the length of required OR time combined with four and a half hour average OR time duration makes scheduling two operations during a normal eight hour workday difficult. The objective of this paper is to analyze the effect that three different process interventions have on the OR cost in OR performing open heart surgeries. The investigated process interventions are 4 days OR week (4D), the better accuracy of operating room time forecast (F) and doing anesthesia induction outside the OR (I). These interventions were emerged from practical organization context. This paper is organized as follows. First we provide a review of the existing literature on measures of OR utilization and investigated three interventions. Based on existing literature we construct a simulation model to test the interventions’ effect on OR utilization. Conclusions of results are presented and practical implications and new contribution to existed theory of operating room management is discussed.

Related Content

. © 2024. 27 pages.
. © 2024. 10 pages.
. © 2024. 13 pages.
. © 2024. 6 pages.
. © 2024. 23 pages.
. © 2024. 14 pages.
. © 2024. 7 pages.
Body Bottom