Article ID: | iaor201526080 |
Volume: | 18 |
Issue: | 2 |
Start Page Number: | 195 |
End Page Number: | 204 |
Publication Date: | Jun 2015 |
Journal: | Health Care Management Science |
Authors: | Bowers John, Mould Gillian, Cheyne Helen, Page Miranda |
Keywords: | programming: travelling salesman, vehicle routing & scheduling, simulation, personnel & manpower planning |
Continuity of care is often critical in delivering high quality health care. However, it is difficult to achieve in community health care where shift patterns and a need to minimise travelling time can reduce the scope for allocating staff to patients. Community midwifery is one example of such a challenge in the National Health Service where postnatal care typically involves a series of home visits. Ideally mothers would receive all of their antenatal and postnatal care from the same midwife. Minimising the number of staff‐handovers helps ensure a better relationship between mothers and midwives, and provides more opportunity for staff to identify emerging problems over a series of home visits. This study examines the allocation and routing of midwives in the community using a variant of a multiple travelling salesmen problem algorithm incorporating staff preferences to explore trade‐offs between travel time and continuity of care. This algorithm was integrated in a simulation to assess the additional effect of staff availability due to shift patterns and part‐time working. The results indicate that continuity of care can be achieved with relatively small increases in travel time. However, shift patterns are problematic: perfect continuity of care is impractical but if there is a degree of flexibility in the visit schedule, reasonable continuity is feasible.