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Emergency department crowding in Singapore: Insights from a systems thinking approach.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Schoenenberger, LK; Bayer, S; Ansah, JP; Matchar, DB; Mohanavalli, RL; Lam, SS; Ong, ME
Published in: SAGE Open Med
2016

OBJECTIVES: Emergency Department crowding is a serious and international health care problem that seems to be resistant to most well intended but often reductionist policy approaches. In this study, we examine Emergency Department crowding in Singapore from a systems thinking perspective using causal loop diagramming to visualize the systemic structure underlying this complex phenomenon. Furthermore, we evaluate the relative impact of three different policies in reducing Emergency Department crowding in Singapore: introduction of geriatric emergency medicine, expansion of emergency medicine training, and implementation of enhanced primary care. METHODS: The construction of the qualitative causal loop diagram is based on consultations with Emergency Department experts, direct observation, and a thorough literature review. For the purpose of policy analysis, a novel approach, the path analysis, is applied. RESULTS: The path analysis revealed that both the introduction of geriatric emergency medicine and the expansion of emergency medicine training may be associated with undesirable consequences contributing to Emergency Department crowding. In contrast, enhancing primary care was found to be germane in reducing Emergency Department crowding; in addition, it has apparently no negative side effects, considering the boundary of the model created. CONCLUSION: Causal loop diagramming was a powerful tool for eliciting the systemic structure of Emergency Department crowding in Singapore. Additionally, the developed model was valuable in testing different policy options.

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Published In

SAGE Open Med

DOI

ISSN

2050-3121

Publication Date

2016

Volume

4

Start / End Page

2050312116671953

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
 

Citation

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Schoenenberger, L. K., Bayer, S., Ansah, J. P., Matchar, D. B., Mohanavalli, R. L., Lam, S. S., & Ong, M. E. (2016). Emergency department crowding in Singapore: Insights from a systems thinking approach. SAGE Open Med, 4, 2050312116671953. https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312116671953
Schoenenberger, Lukas K., Steffen Bayer, John P. Ansah, David B. Matchar, Rajagopal L. Mohanavalli, Sean Sw Lam, and Marcus Eh Ong. “Emergency department crowding in Singapore: Insights from a systems thinking approach.SAGE Open Med 4 (2016): 2050312116671953. https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312116671953.
Schoenenberger LK, Bayer S, Ansah JP, Matchar DB, Mohanavalli RL, Lam SS, et al. Emergency department crowding in Singapore: Insights from a systems thinking approach. SAGE Open Med. 2016;4:2050312116671953.
Schoenenberger, Lukas K., et al. “Emergency department crowding in Singapore: Insights from a systems thinking approach.SAGE Open Med, vol. 4, 2016, p. 2050312116671953. Pubmed, doi:10.1177/2050312116671953.
Schoenenberger LK, Bayer S, Ansah JP, Matchar DB, Mohanavalli RL, Lam SS, Ong ME. Emergency department crowding in Singapore: Insights from a systems thinking approach. SAGE Open Med. 2016;4:2050312116671953.
Journal cover image

Published In

SAGE Open Med

DOI

ISSN

2050-3121

Publication Date

2016

Volume

4

Start / End Page

2050312116671953

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences