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The New Jersey Institute of Technology's
Electronic Theses & Dissertations Project

Title: Essays on health care quality: Timeliness, equity, and efficiency
Author: Abdulai, Abubakar-Sadiq Bouda
View Online: njit-etd2021-084
(xi, 89 pages ~ 1.9 MB pdf)
Department: School of Management
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy
Program: Business Data Science
Document Type: Dissertation
Advisory Committee: Ehrlich, Michael A. (Committee chair)
Chen, Yi (Committee member)
Yu, Dantong (Committee member)
Fresneda Fernandez, Jorge Eduardo (Committee member)
Wei, Zhi (Committee member)
Date: 2021-08
Keywords: Efficiency in care
Emergency care
Equity in care
Health care quality
Health policy
Timeliness
Availability: Unrestricted
Abstract:

According to the National Academy of Medicine (NAM) (formerly called the Institute of Medicine), a quality health care system embodies six attributes: timeliness, equity, safety, efficiency, effectiveness, and patient-centeredness. Timeliness is to avoid unnecessary delays in care delivery for patients and caregivers; equity is to ensure that the quality of care that patients receive does not vary based on their personal characteristics; safety is to ensure that the care that is intended to help patients does not harm them; efficiency is to avoid waste and optimize resource allocation to improve care delivery; effective care is one that relies on sound scientific knowledge and delivers the most benefit to the patient; and patient-centeredness concerns the contributions of patients, their family members, and care givers to the patient's health. Thus, to make progress in quality care improvement, every aspect of the health care system as related to these six items must be improved.

Recent efforts targeted at improving quality of care in urgent care settings have included benchmarking and performance measurement, financial incentivisation, public reporting of performance data, adoption and use of health information technology, and other quality improvement initiatives. With the advent of artificial intelligence (AI), many believe there is potential for transformation of the health care industry through adoption of AI technologies.

Through a series of essays, this dissertation contributes to the literature on timeliness, equity, and efficiency in the emergency department. The first essay assesses recent trends in emergency department throughput in the United States. The second assesses current trends and sources of inequities in emergency department wait time across racial and ethnic groups. In the third, a model aimed at improving efficiency in the emergency department is developed — an explainable machine learning model that leverages text data to predict patient disposition during triage is developed.


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