Transcript Slide 1
Scenario Generator:
Health Services simulation
Why simulate?
• Go beyond a process map into potential impacts of implementation
• Aids understanding of complex systems
• Discover unanticipated consequences of a plan
BUT
• Simulation won’t tell you the answer, but it will help you ask better
questions
• It will only be as good as the data you put in, but it will help you make
sense of that data
• All models are wrong, but some are useful
• It will not be an accurate predictor of events, but it might be better to
be “broadly right than precisely wrong”
Main simulation approaches
Modeling Method
What is modeled
Continuous
Discrete event
Discrete rate
Processes
Individual items
Flows of stuff
Examples
Processes:
chemical,
biological,
economic,
electronics.
Things: traffic,
equipment, work
product, people.
Information:
data, messages,
and network
protocols at the
packet level.
Rate-based flow
of stuff:
homogeneous
products, high
speed
production, data
feeds and
streams,
mining.
What causes a
change in state
Time steps
A time change
An event
An event
Interval between
time steps is
constant. Model
recalculations are
sequential and
time dependent.
Interval between
events is
dependent on
when events
occur. Model
only recalculates
when events
occur.
Characteristics of
what is modeled
Track
characteristics in a
database or
assume the flow is
homogeneous.
Using attributes,
items are
assigned unique
characteristics
and can then be
tracked
throughout the
model.
Interval
between events
is dependent on
when events
occur. Model
only
recalculates
when events
occur.
Track
characteristics
in a database or
assume the flow
is
homogeneous.
Statistical detail
General statistics
about the system:
amount, efficiency,
etc.
In addition to
general
statistics, each
item can be
individually
tracked: count,
utilization, cycle
time.
In addition to
general
statistics,
effective rates,
cumulative
amount.
Simulation modelling in NHS
• Very few simulation tools available used in a healthcare
setting
• Key commercial tools used within NHS environment:
– Simul8 (Discrete Event approach)
– Isee systems - STELLA/iThink (Continuous approach)
– ExtendSim (Multiple methodologies – continuous or discrete)
Features of Scenario Generator
• Discrete event simulation applied to a strategic planning domain
• No programming skills needed
• Introduces element of randomness (stochastic process)
• Allows simulation of a suite of care pathways running
simultaneously
• Supports reiteration of decisions over time
Functional model
Population
Demography
Prevalence
Scenarios
Referral patterns
Capacity
Duration
Events
Population
Demographic
weighting
Prevalence
Mental Health
Urgent
Planned
Whole
system
model
Simulation
results
Pathway
models
Constrained
resources
Maternity
Service
points, flows
& waits
Capacity & Constrained Resources
• Resources can be configured that have
– event duration, inherited from actual step or user defined
– number of queues
• A constrained resource can be associated with any pathway steps
across all pathways in the model
• A pathway step can be associated with one resource (or none)
• Events reaching constrained resources are distributed randomly
to queues.
Ideal project team in use: Scenario
Generator
• Have some idea of the problem you are addressing
• Identify your principal customer / stakeholder
• Draw together a core team
– leadership – a champion senior clinician or executive manager
– service design / improvement lead
– commissioning lead
– public health lead / analyst
– finance lead
– information analyst
• Develop a collaborative approach
• Work within an overall change programme
Define
problem
Design
initial
model
Select
approaches
Develop
concept
Do
Do other
analys
analyses
es
Validate
Refine
Simulate
Draw
conclusions
Consult
Act
upon
outputs
Draft Outcomes ver 4.2
Rehabilitation activity and estimated running costs when comparing a baseline and intervention models, 2008
Inpatient Strokes acute costs
Maximum acute bed occupancy
Hospital based rehab (up to 6 weeks)
Maximum rehab bed occupancy
ESD rehab @ 12 weeks (Surrey example costs)
Baseline
Activity
Cost
351
£1,116,882
16
284
£539,600
22
£1,656,482
Intervention
Activity
Cost
351
£1,116,882
16
183
£285,060
18
106
£178,080
£1,580,022
Baseline of Rehabilitation
Stroke unit rehabilitation
Other rehabilitation
Est bed
days
0
9088
9088
Max bed
occupancy
0
22
22
ALOS
25
32
Est bed
days
3545
1248
Max bed
occupancy
12
6
Intervention
36
67
Reduction
-19%
-28%
Activity
0
284
ALOS
25
32
Activity
144
39
106
4262
4793
Baseline
45
94
Early supported discharge team in place
Stroke unit rehabilitation
Other rehabilitation
Early supported discharge
Reduction in average bed days:
Outcomes
Expected institutionalisation
Expected early deaths after treatment
Wirral PCT Primary Care Advice
Lack of CAB capacity
Queue size - Follow up CAB appointments
600
N people in queue
500
3 day wait
400
7 day wait
10 day wait
300
14 day wait
200
100
0
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Month
• Solution: CAB staff see 21 instead of 18 clients per week OR
increase
• staff by 1 FTE
• Led to additional resource for CABs, determined by population need
(IMD)