DETROIT — The patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model is an emerging team-based approach for primary health care. PCMH is aimed at improving timely access to care, providing continuity of care by a health care team and lowering health care costs. PCMH aims to alleviate future health problems through tailored health care that focuses on patient wellness and prevention.
Kai Yang, Ph.D., professor of industrial and systems engineering in the College of Engineering at Wayne State University, has received a collaborative research grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for the project, “An Allocation Model with Dynamic Updates for Balanced Workload Distribution on Patient-Centered Medical Homes.” The project, funded collectively at $552,009 of which $220,009 has been allocated to Wayne State, is a collaboration with researchers from the University of Michigan and the University of Georgia. Yang is leading the project, which will focus on the Veterans Health Administration, the largest health care system in the U.S.
According to Yang, the project aims to develop a comprehensive health information technology data preparation strategy that will provide health care demand and supply portfolio data. In addition, the team will develop an adaptive discrete cluster-based statistical estimation model that can predict health care workload based on key patient attributes, such as diagnosis and treatment. The project will also create stochastic optimization models to aid in managing patient panels — the set of all patients assigned to a primary care physician — and staffing levels for PCMH teams.
“These models will provide dynamic updating rules for patient and staffing allocation with a random and migrating patient population in medical facilities,” said Yang. “We also aim to provide a real-time appointment scheduling system to improve daily operations through optimal patient allocation and staffing under random and changing patient demands for service.”
By developing a health care workload portfolio estimation model, a patient allocation model and a dynamic scheduling strategy, the research team will improve PCMH practices by assigning patients to provider team members so that providers’ time can be fully utilized and patients receive prompt, adequate and economical health care.
“We expect the results of this research will be implemented in hundreds of medical facilities across the U.S.,” said Yang. “In addition, the research will give undergraduate and graduate students, particularly underrepresented groups, the chance to participate in the research and various conferences stemming from this project. This additional learning opportunity for our students gives them real-world experience that will ultimately benefit their future careers.”
The National Science Foundation grant number for this award is 1233504.
Wayne State University is one of the nation’s pre-eminent public research universities in an urban setting. Through its multidisciplinary approach to research and education, and its ongoing collaboration with government, industry and other institutions, the university seeks to enhance economic growth and improve the quality of life in the city of Detroit, state of Michigan and throughout the world. For more information about research at Wayne State University, visit http://www.research.wayne.edu.
Accelerate mobility
-
Math's 'Flipped classroom’ model to support student success
-
Wayne State celebrates first-generation students, social mobility
-
Provost announces 2024-25 Academic Leadership Academy cohort
-
Wayne State School of Social Work receives more than $1 million to support the next generation of Michigan’s behavioral health social workers
College to Career
-
Wayne State University celebrates 2024 graduates
-
WSU student selected for prestigious trucking program to shape the future of logistics
-
Wayne State University introduces 24 courses to boost academic offerings
-
Wayne State celebrates first-generation students, social mobility
Fuel innovation
-
Wayne State University wins top national prize for innovation and economic engagement
-
Wayne State University launches WSU OPEN to speed and simplify external partnerships, names Michigan Central as first partner
-
Wayne State University partners with Michigan Tech to launch NEH-Funded Deep Mapping Institute
-
Detroit researchers find new clues in causes of vision loss in various ocular diseases that may lead to new treatments
Empower health
-
WSU students and faculty work to reduce food waste on campus
-
Michigan Developmental Disabilities Institute awarded $99,000 grant for health equity training on disability and aging in communities of color
-
Bernard J. Costello, MD, DMD, joins Wayne State University as Senior Vice President for Health Affairs
-
College of Nursing grant helps train hundreds to address mental health challenges
Public Health
-
Bernard J. Costello, MD, DMD, joins Wayne State University as Senior Vice President for Health Affairs
-
V Efua Prince explores urban health challenges in new book ‘Kin’ amid ongoing research on addiction and mental health
-
Riding with the Wayne Mobile Health Unit
-
NIH funds critical center in Detroit to lead efforts to investigate and mitigate health impacts of community-voiced chemical and non-chemical stressors