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The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent- Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan PhD

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Page 1: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding:

Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire

Roger A. McCain PhD,

Richard Hamilton, M.D.

Frank Linnehan PhD

Page 2: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

For presentation to Artificial Economics 2011

The Seventh Conference,

The Hague, Sept. 1-2

Page 3: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

The Problem

• Overcrowding of hospital emergency departments is a recognized problem in the U. S. A.

• Patients seek healthcare in the Emergency Department for a variety of reasons.– a portion have an acute emergency

– a portion seeks care because of lack of an acceptable alternative.

• Drawing on noncooperative game theory, we argue that ED overcrowding is the equilibrium state of the current health care system.

Page 4: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Solution?

• One generally accepted solution to ED overcrowding and congestion is to in- crease capacity.

• If the game theory hypothesis is correct, then increasing capacity will merely reproduce the crowding problem on a larger scale.

Page 5: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Our Study

• We address this issue by means of – Examples from noncooperative game theory– Agent-based simulations

• The scale is larger

• Boundely rational learning is incorporated

– A Questionnaire Study• The agent-based simulations and the questionnaire

study are coordinated.

Page 6: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

A Small-Scale Example

This is an anticoordination game, and presents special problems for a learning model.

Page 7: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

At a Slightly Larger Scale

Page 8: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Assumptions

1. The patients arrive in a random order.

2. This determines the patient’s place in line.

3. Average waiting time is proportional to the place in line.

– Being one place further back in the line reduces this satisfaction by two

4. The alternative to the ED provides a satisfaction level of five.

Page 9: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Noncooperative Solution

• This game has a large number of solutions.

• All are defined by the same condition, however: just six choose the ED while the other four choose their alternative.

Page 10: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Generalizing,

• In a real case, we would expect:1. Just as in the two-person anticoordination game,

equilibrium requires some agents to choose different strategies even if they themselves do not differ.

2. When the strategies are modes of service, the number choosing the different services in equilibrium will be such that the different services yield the same benefits, in expected value terms.

3. The equilibrium is not efficient, in general.

Page 11: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Simulation

• To further extend the model and allow for 1) much larger numbers of potential pa- tients, 2) heterogeneity of health states, experience, and expectation, 3) boundedly rational learning, and 4) initialization effects, dynamic adjustment and transients, we undertook agent-based computer simulation.

Page 12: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Agents Are Patients

• For these simulations, the agents are potential patients, while the ED is not a player in the game but a mechanism that mediates the interaction of the agents.

• It is assumed that (at each iteration of the simulation) agents are randomly sorted into four health states.

Page 13: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Health States

• Agents in states 1 and 3 have health concerns such that treatment in the ED offers a higher benefit than the alternative in the absence of congestion.

• For agents in state 2, there is a health concern such that treatment through the alternative mode offers higher expected benefit than treatment by the ED, even in the absence of congestion.

• Others have no need for health care.

Page 14: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Some Details 1

• In the simulations, there are 10,000 agents, and at each iteration they are sorted into health states such that about 60 % will seek health care from one source or another.

• Each agent makes the decision based on an expected benefit variable, with a normally distributed pseudorandom error.

• Qualification: For technical reasons having to do with the trial-and-error learning process, at least 5 % of those agents who seek health care choose the Emergency Department regardless of their expectations.

Page 15: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Some Details 2

• After all these decisions have been registered, the congestion of the emergency department is computed by comparing its capacity parameter to the number of users.

• Congestion exists only when the number of users is greater than capacity;

• The experiences for all agents who choose the ED are then computed on the basis of congestion together with the parameters of their specific health states, with a pseudorandom variate to capture the uncertainty inherent in medical treatment.

Page 16: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Some Details 3

• Numerical indicators of experience are roughly calibrated to the five-point Likert scale used in the questionnaire survey reported below.

• Expected benefits are then updated.

• The updating formula is the Koyck lag formula, Et = αXt−1 +(1−α)Et−1.

• For the simulations reported α = 1/2.

Page 17: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

A Representative Simulation

Page 18: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

A Complication

• These agents form their expectations as to the benefit from ED care on the basis of their own past experience plus an error.

• Those who choose the ED are the ones who most overestimate the benefits of the ED.

• This is shown by the upper black line. • Nevertheless experienced benefit from the ED

converges to the experienced benefit of the alternative.

Page 19: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Why this Wrinkle?

• It is crucial that the agents learn only from their own experience. In an anticoordination game imitative learning will not converge to a Nash equilibrium.

• An early version of the simulations had no errors. • The questionnaire study indicated that the average

ED patient was disappointed. • The experience-plus-error model retrodicts that

result.

Page 20: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

More Simulations

• For this study 18 distinct simulations were recorded.

• Two simulations were run using each of 9 random number seeds.

• For one series of 9 simulations the capacity of the Emergency Department was set at 500, while for others it was set at 1000.

• The simulations were run for 200 iterations.

• The next slide shows the recorded Emergency Department congestion for the 18 simulations run.

Page 21: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Congestion

Page 22: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Reported Experience – Type 1

Page 23: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Reported Experience – Type 2

Page 24: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Number of Users

Page 25: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Conclusions from the Simulations 1

1. As in the small-N models, an equilibrium or stable state corresponds to congestion sufficient to reduce the benefits of users of the ED to approximate equal- ity with the benefits from alternative service;

2. In these simulations with a large but finite number of agents and boundedly rational learning, the approximation to Emergency Department Overcrowdiing to the alternative benefit may not be perfect and may vary somewhat with parameters and initialization, so that

Page 26: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Conclusions from the Simulations 2

3. An expansion of ED capacity can result in some slight improvement in congestion and patient experience, despite very substantial deterioration of the experience due to congestion, and finally

4. these results are uniform and predictable over simulations with a wide range of differing random inputs and detailed evolution.

Page 27: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Questionnaire 1

• A telephone survey was conducted of patients who visited the emergency department of the hospital of the Drexel University School of Medicine.

• These telephone surveys were conducted by an independent research group who were given a list of all patients who had visited the ED during summer, 2007.

• Names and telephone numbers were randomly chosen from this list to complete 301 interviews.

Page 28: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Questionnaire 2

• Eight survey items were used to assess patient satisfaction.1. Quantity of care,

2. Promptness of care.

3. Administrative staff effectiveness

4. Medical staff capability

5. Personal Care

6. Staff Time Spent

7. Overall Quality of Care

8. Overall Satisfaction

Page 29: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Questionnaire 3

• A five point, Likert- type response scale was used for each item, ranging from 1 = Very satisfied to 5 = Very dissatisfied.

• The same facets of satisfaction were also used to assess the patients expected experience in the ED and the patients expected experience with an alternative mode of care

Page 30: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Questionnaire 4

• Paired t-tests were used to assess differences in satisfaction levels between what the patients experienced at the ED and expected satisfaction with the alternative (Table 3), as well as the difference in the expected and experienced satisfaction with the ED.

Page 31: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Comparison

Page 32: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Disappointment!

Page 33: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Concluding Summary 1

The project reported in this paper was highly interdisciplinary, drawing ideas and techniques from several sources. There are novel contributions for each.

•For health care policy, we have specified, tested, and verified a Nash equilibrium hypothesis of the cause and nature of emergency room overcrowding. This hypothesis implies that increasing emergency room capacity may have little or no impact on overcrowding, in the absence of important changes in access to the alternative modes of medical care.

Page 34: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Concluding Summary 2

• For game theory, we have provided an example of testing a game-theoretic equilibrium model by questionnaire methods, using a realistically scaled agent-based computer simulation with boundedly rational learning to extend the insights of two- and small N-person game models to generate hypotheses for the survey.

Page 35: The Problem of Emergency Department Overcrowding: Agent-Based Simulation and Test by Questionnaire Roger A. McCain PhD, Richard Hamilton, M.D. Frank Linnehan

Concluding Summary 3

• For questionnaire methods, we have provided an example of application to hypotheses from game theory and some evidence of the importance and consequences of heterogeneity, and the possibility of modeling heterogeneity explicitly by means of agent-based computer simulation.