Article ID: | iaor20114566 |
Volume: | 212 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 596 |
End Page Number: | 605 |
Publication Date: | Aug 2011 |
Journal: | European Journal of Operational Research |
Authors: | Bretthauer Kurt M, Mahar Stephen, Salzarulo Peter A |
Keywords: | networks, allocation: resources, location |
Multi‐hospital systems have become very common in today’s healthcare environment. However, there has been limited published research examining the opportunities and challenges of pooling specialized services to a subset of hospitals in the network. Therefore, this paper considers how hospital networks with multiple locations can leverage pooling benefits when deciding where to position specialized services, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), transplants, or neonatal intensive care. Specifically, we develop an optimization model to determine how many and which of a hospital network’s hospitals should be set up to deliver a specialized service. Importantly, this model takes into account both financial considerations and patient service levels. Computational results illustrate the value of optimally pooling resources across a subset of hospitals in the network versus two alternate approaches: (1) delivering the service at all locations and requiring each site to handle its own demand, or (2) locating the service at one hospital that handles all network demand.