• Ophthalmology · Mar 2019

    Data-Driven Scheduling for Improving Patient Efficiency in Ophthalmology Clinics.

    • Michelle R Hribar, Abigail E Huang, Isaac H Goldstein, Leah G Reznick, Annie Kuo, Allison R Loh, Daniel J Karr, Lorri Wilson, and Michael F Chiang.
    • Department of Medical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon. Electronic address: hribarm@ohsu.edu.
    • Ophthalmology. 2019 Mar 1; 126 (3): 347-354.

    PurposeTo improve clinic efficiency through development of an ophthalmology scheduling template developed using simulation models and electronic health record (EHR) data.DesignWe created a computer simulation model of 1 pediatric ophthalmologist's clinic using EHR timestamp data, which was used to develop a scheduling template based on appointment length (short, medium, or long). We assessed its impact on clinic efficiency after implementation in the practices of 5 different pediatric ophthalmologists.ParticipantsWe observed and timed patient appointments in person (n = 120) and collected EHR timestamps for 2 years of appointments (n = 650). We calculated efficiency measures for 172 clinic sessions before implementation vs. 119 clinic sessions after implementation.MethodsWe validated clinic workflow timings calculated from EHR timestamps and the simulation models based on them with observed timings. From simulation tests, we developed a new scheduling template and evaluated it with efficiency metrics before vs. after implementation.Main Outcome MeasuresMeasurements of clinical efficiency (mean clinic volume, patient wait time, examination time, and clinic length).ResultsMean physician examination time calculated from EHR timestamps was 13.8±8.2 minutes and was not statistically different from mean physician examination time from in-person observation (13.3±7.3 minutes; P = 0.7), suggesting that EHR timestamps are accurate. Mean patient wait time for the simulation model (31.2±10.9 minutes) was not statistically different from the observed mean patient wait times (32.6±25.3 minutes; P = 0.9), suggesting that simulation models are accurate. After implementation of the new scheduling template, all 5 pediatric ophthalmologists showed statistically significant improvements in clinic volume (mean increase of 1-3 patients/session; P ≤ 0.05 for 2 providers; P ≤ 0.008 for 3 providers), whereas 4 of 5 had improvements in mean patient wait time (average improvements of 3-4 minutes/patient; statistically significant for 2 providers, P ≤ 0.008). All of the ophthalmologists' examination times remained the same before and after implementation.ConclusionsSimulation models based on big data from EHRs can test clinic changes before real-life implementation. A scheduling template using predicted appointment length improves clinic efficiency and may generalize to other clinics. Electronic health records have potential to become tools for supporting clinic operations improvement.Copyright © 2018 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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