论文标题
使用基于代理的仿真来调查奥地利医疗保健系统的弹性
Stress-testing the Resilience of the Austrian Healthcare System Using Agent-Based Simulation
论文作者
论文摘要
患者不会随机访问医生,而是通过自然出现的患者流动网络。随着退休,大规模的隔离和由于大流行时的疾病而缺席,或其他冲击稀疏这些网络,该系统可能会靠近一个临界点,在临界点失去了向人群提供护理的能力。在这里,我们提出了一个数据驱动的框架,以量化奥地利通过基于代理的模型在奥地利的初级和二级护理冲击的区域弹性。对于每个区域和医学专业,我们通过删除系统中越来越多的医师数量来构建从管理数据中构建详细的患者共享网络,并强调这些网络。这使我们能够衡量区域弹性指标,描述在不再治疗个别患者之前可以从某个地区删除多少医生。我们发现,这种临界点确实存在,并且地区和医学专业的弹性有很大差异。这些系统的差异可能与个人医生的指标有关,通过量化其假设的去除会给系统(风险评分)压力多少,或者从去除其他医生会吸收的压力中有多少压力(福利评分)。我们的压力测试框架可以使卫生当局能够迅速识别瓶颈,以便检查这些自然新兴的医师网络以及潜在的缺勤将如何影响它们。
Patients do not access physicians at random but rather via naturally emerging networks of patient flows between them. As retirements, mass quarantines and absence due to sickness during pandemics, or other shocks thin out these networks, the system might be pushed closer to a tipping point where it loses its ability to deliver care to the population. Here we propose a data-driven framework to quantify the regional resilience to such shocks of primary and secondary care in Austria via an agent-based model. For each region and medical specialty we construct detailed patient-sharing networks from administrative data and stress-test these networks by removing increasing numbers of physicians from the system. This allows us to measure regional resilience indicators describing how many physicians can be removed from a certain area before individual patients won't be treated anymore. We find that such tipping points do indeed exist and that regions and medical specialties differ substantially in their resilience. These systemic differences can be related to indicators for individual physicians by quantifying how much their hypothetical removal would stress the system (risk score) or how much of the stress from the removal of other physicians they would be able to absorb (benefit score). Our stress-testing framework could enable health authorities to rapidly identify bottlenecks in access to care as well as to inspect these naturally emerging physician networks and how potential absences would impact them.