Peru has a physician’s density of 1.42 (Instituto
Nacional de Estadística e Informática, 2012), while
other countries in South America have larger
densities, such as 1.76 for Brazil, and 3.16 for
Argentina (Central Intelligence Agency).
The hospital used in this study is located in Piura
which is the second largest province in Peru. Piura
has approximately 1.8 million habitants, 6% of the
total population in Peru. For the province of Piura
32.1% of the population is considered poor. In 2012,
there were 27 hospitals in Piura or if evenly
distributed each hospital serves on average 66,666
habitants; compared to 44,059 habitants per hospital
in Lima. Piura has a physician density about 0.75,
compared to the national average of 1.42. In Piura,
the percentage of people with some insurance is
55.1% (Instituto Nacional de Estadística e
Informática, 2012).
The hospital examined in this study is a MINSA
hospital where people with SIS insurance or without
insurance can gain admittance. This hospital is one
of the most visited in the region.
Satisfaction surveys administered by the Peruvian
Health Ministry show a very high dissatisfaction rate
towards the service offered by the hospitals, mainly
due to the long waiting times (MINSA,
www.minsa.gob.pe). This hospital is not exempt
from that situation. While many initiatives that have
been implemented to solve the problems all of these
initiatives have used quality tools such as
satisfaction survey and brainstorming without using
quantitative tools to quantify the impact of different
possible solutions by carrying out “what-if” scenario
analysis.
Discrete event simulation has been used for a
variety of health care applications (Jahn et.al. 2010).
For example, it has been used to improve patient
care in emergency departments (Abo-hamad, and
Arisha, 2013; Brenner et.al., 2010; Cabrera et. al.,
2012; Hoot et.al., 2008; Jamon and Lin, 2012; and
Zeng et. al., 2012), to improve bed utilization in
hospitals (Holm et.al., 2012), to model outpatient’s
clinic (Al-Araidah et. al., 2012; Villamizar et.al.,
2011), to analyze the capacity of the Intensive Care
Unit at hospitals (Troy and Rosenberg, 2009), and to
improve radiation therapy planning process (Werker
et.al. 2009).
For all the above, discrete simulation with
ARENA was used for modelling the outpatient’s
clinic of the MINSA hospital under study. The
simulation tool can help hospital management assess
the service level through measuring queue length,
waiting times, and utilization rates for the different
health services. Additionally, it allows trying many
operational changes to determine an optimal system
configuration.
2 SYSTEM DESCRIPTION
The outpatient clinic at the hospital studied offers 25
medical specialties. In 2010, 60,351 outpatients were
serviced. As it can be seen in Figure 1, the demand
does not fluctuate much across time. The drop in
October and November for 2010 was due to a strike
at the hospital during which only critical cases were
admitted.
Figure 1: Monthly demand for the outpatient clinic at the
hospital, 2010.
According to the hospital records, 30% of patients
had SIS insurance, 60% did not, and the rest were
exonerated of the payment due to their economic
situation. These percentages are also steady over
time.
The outpatient clinic has a four stage service
process. First is admission. Second is the insurance
documentation (SIS module) just for the patients
with subsidized insurance, where they will receive
the payment waiver. The third stage is the medical
assessment itself. Finally, the last stage includes
medical support services such as pharmacy, x-ray,
and laboratory tests. From Monday to Friday, all
areas work from 7:00 am to 1:00 pm, except x-ray
which works until 4:00 pm.
The process at the outpatient clinic is:
(1) Patients arrive at the clinic’s admission area,
where they can schedule a medical appointment
for that day. If the patients have insurance, they
must complete the insurance process; here, the
insurance staff verifies if the insurance will
cover the medical expenses, otherwise the
patient need must pay for service.
(2) Patients go to the waiting room to be called by
the specialist for their assessment. The hospital
Jan Feb Mar Apr May June Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Total
5686 5373 6519 5541 6005 5847 5360 5472 5581 3238 895 4834
0
2000
4000
6000
8000
Number of patients
Monthly Hospital Demand at its Outpatients
Clinic, 2010
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