Case study: Location analytics – helping Ipswich Hospital tackle escalating demand

Published: 13-Oct-2014

Exploring how Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust is improving the management of patient flows with the introduction of Esri UK location analytics solution

About the trust

Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust (IHT) provides healthcare services to more than 356,000 people throughout the local area. One of the hospital’s key objectives is to move to the centre of a network of co-located and integrated services, delivered to meet demand for healthcare across the region as well as driving education and research. It’s an ambitious goal, but to meet it IHT needs to map out where that demand is coming from.

The challenge

With more than 75,000 emergency department attendances a year, and nearly 30,000 unplanned emergency admissions, IHT, like many healthcare providers across the UK, faces tough challenges in managing the demand for its services.

The provision of healthcare is an essential service and an emotive topic, so it is crucial that it can predict demand across the population and respond by meeting it quickly. To do that, ‘visualising’ the challenge it faces can drive real insight and ultimately, lead to a beater provision of service for the people it serves

According to Paul Scott, director of finance and performance at the Ipswich Hospital Trust (IHT): “Our existing information solutions rely on extensive use of spreadsheets. They are therefore simply unable to provide us with the level of insight into patterns of behaviour in core populations that we urgently need. So we decided to seek out a solution that would give us greater insight into where demand is coming from, within our catchment areas, and what form that demand will take.”

Our existing information solutions rely on extensive use of spreadsheets. They are therefore simply unable to provide us with the level of insight into patterns of behaviour in core populations that we urgently need

Currently, the escalating demand faced by the hospital’s A&E department continues to ramp up financial pressures on the IHT system. This is making it all but impossible to efficiently manage patient flows. Increasingly too, there is a knock-on effect on inpatients and outpatient departments and the wider care flow pathway.

The challenge facing the hospital is made more difficult by the need to meet tough key performance indicator (KPI) metrics, including keeping waiting times below four hours. In tackling these challenges, IHT has the following priorities: to improve clinical outcomes, to overcome financial challenges and make savings, and to make systems more efficient.

The solution

Not only did IHT need an objective understanding of current demand, but the trust also needed to know how to intervene more effectively in the future. It decided to implement a feasibility programme to assess how location analysis and actuarial analysis, working together, could provide insight into demand management that could shape future services for the better. Working with an actuarial services provider, which provided analysis into financial trends and risk, Esri UK delivered the location analytics solution to turn this vision into a reality.

The solution provides IHT with a combination of insight from Esri’s geographical information systems (GIS) and location analytics technology and high-quality clinical and financial data analysis, feeding into long-term financial modelling, provided by the actuarial service provider.

Esri UK’s location analytics solution was vitally important in delivering data visualisation to provide the required insight. Utilising the ArcGIS platform on IHT’s infrastructure behind a secure firewall, ArcGIS for Server and ArcGIS for Desktop were deployed to provide services to a management insight dashboard.

IHT gains additional insight by being able to map out the number of cases going to A&E by a range of variables. The information is visualised as a hotspot analysis for example, highlighting the source of demand. The dashboard also provides a set of Key Performance Indicator (KPI) reporting tools, giving managers a dramatically-improved understanding of the status of demand in the hospital by enabling them to break down A&E attendees by number of cases, average waiting time or mode of travel, and then split the figures down by timeframes.

The benefits

It has given us a whole new platform for discussion and changed the conversation at board level to focus on moving to a more-sophisticated way of visualising and reporting data

IHT recognises the huge potential of the system to achieve faster time to insight. Visualising data in a map format helps IHT understand where the hotspots are for certain diseases, admission methods and average time to treatment.

Understanding where demand comes from into emergency admissions, and the type and level of that demand, has allowed IHT to pinpoint areas of intervention to mitigate it.

The hospital believes this will enable it to improve its resourcing processes. It will be able to bring in more clinical support staff to meet increased demand on certain days of the week, for example, and therefore alleviate resource pressure. This could help minimise costs while maintaining performance and clinical standards.

According to Scott: “While this remains an R&D project, it has highlighted a different way of looking at our organisation, and the demand pressures we face. In addition, it has demonstrated the huge potential of looking at demand from a population rather than individual attendance basis.

“It also allows us to try out ‘what if’ scenarios. In short, it has given us a whole new platform for discussion and changed the conversation at board level to focus on moving to a more-sophisticated way of visualising and reporting data. The IHT board has even requested that geographic information and location is included within its business intelligence strategy.”

Moving forward, the outputs from patient demand analysis, mapping insights and possible interventions could provide a basis for service reconfiguration and therefore wastage reductions.

The use of GIS information, in particular in conjunction with actuarial, could put IHT ahead of other NHS trusts in terms of innovative use of IT in healthcare provision.

Moreover, this is exciting, ground-breaking project has the potential to revolutionise the future of healthcare demand management, not just in Ipswich, but across the whole of the UK.

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