Using no-show modeling to improve clinic performance

Joanne Daggy(Purdue University West Lafayette), Mark Lawley(Purdue University West Lafayette), Deanna Willis(University School), Debra Thayer(Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center), Christopher Suelzer(Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center), Poching DeLaurentis(Purdue University West Lafayette), Ayten Türkcan(Purdue University West Lafayette), Santanu Chakraborty(Purdue University West Lafayette), Laura P. Sands(Purdue University West Lafayette)
Health Informatics Journal
December 1, 2010
Cited by 190

Abstract

'No-shows' or missed appointments result in under-utilized clinic capacity. We develop a logistic regression model using electronic medical records to estimate patients' no-show probabilities and illustrate the use of the estimates in creating clinic schedules that maximize clinic capacity utilization while maintaining small patient waiting times and clinic overtime costs. This study used information on scheduled outpatient appointments collected over a three-year period at a Veterans Affairs medical center. The call-in process for 400 clinic days was simulated and for each day two schedules were created: the traditional method that assigned one patient per appointment slot, and the proposed method that scheduled patients according to their no-show probability to balance patient waiting, overtime and revenue. Combining patient no-show models with advanced scheduling methods would allow more patients to be seen a day while improving clinic efficiency. Clinics should consider the benefits of implementing scheduling software that includes these methods relative to the cost of no-shows.


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