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Emergency medicine patient wait time multivariable prediction models: a multicentre derivation and validation study

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-15, 22:25 authored by Katie Walker, Jirayus Jiarpakdee, Anne Loupis, Chakkrit Tantithamthavorn, Keith Joe, Michael Ben-Meir, Hamed Akhlaghi, Jennie Hutton, Wei Wang, Michael Stephenson, Gabriel Blecher, Buntine Paul, Amy Sweeny, Burak Turhan
ObjectivePatients, families and community members would like emergency department wait time visibility. This would improve patient journeys through emergency medicine. The study objective was to derive, internally and externally validate machine learning models to predict emergency patient wait times that are applicable to a wide variety of emergency departments.MethodsTwelve emergency departments provided 3 years of retrospective administrative data from Australia (2017–2019). Descriptive and exploratory analyses were undertaken on the datasets. Statistical and machine learning models were developed to predict wait times at each site and were internally and externally validated. Model performance was tested on COVID-19 period data (January to June 2020).ResultsThere were 1 930 609 patient episodes analysed and median site wait times varied from 24 to 54 min. Individual site model prediction median absolute errors varied from±22.6 min (95% CI 22.4 to 22.9) to ±44.0 min (95% CI 43.4 to 44.4). Global model prediction median absolute errors varied from ±33.9 min (95% CI 33.4 to 34.0) to ±43.8 min (95% CI 43.7 to 43.9). Random forest and linear regression models performed the best, rolling average models underestimated wait times. Important variables were triage category, last-k patient average wait time and arrival time. Wait time prediction models are not transferable across hospitals. Models performed well during the COVID-19 lockdown period.ConclusionsElectronic emergency demographic and flow information can be used to approximate emergency patient wait times. A general model is less accurate if applied without site-specific factors.

History

Journal

EMERGENCY MEDICINE JOURNAL

Volume

39

Pagination

386-393

Location

England

ISSN

1472-0205

eISSN

1472-0213

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP