Achieving swift and even hospital-wide patient flows
Doktorsavhandling, 2025

Healthcare systems worldwide face mounting challenges as surging demand outpaces care delivery capacity. This imbalance leads to longer waiting times for consultations and surgeries, as well as overcrowded emergency departments and wards. Meanwhile, healthcare costs continue to rise as a share of GDP, underscoring the urgent need for innovative solutions. Over the past two decades, practitioners and researchers have focused on patient flow optimization to improve hospital throughput. Yet, most improvement efforts have been local, targeting specific units rather than adopting a hospital-wide perspective. This dissertation addresses this gap by investigating patient flow comprehensively, identifying key barriers, and with contributing new knowledge on enhancing hospital-wide efficiency.

To explore this, five studies were conducted, each offering distinct perspectives. Study I, a systematic literature review, maps barriers and root causes. Study II, an international interview study with senior executives, examines solution strategies. Study III, a single-case study of a full-service clinic, investigates the impact of patient volume, variability, and complexity. Study IV, an international multiple-case study of leading hospitals, explores decision-making authority and governance structures. Study V, a multi-site interview study with frontline professionals, provides insights from nurses and physicians.

Synthesizing findings across these studies, this dissertation advances both theory and practice by applying a systems perspective to the complexity of patient flow. The theoretical contribution lies in employing operations management theories to healthcare, highlighting context-specific challenges hospitals face in maintaining smooth flows. The research identifies a multi-level system of barriers, often producing unintended consequences when well-intended initiatives lead to suboptimal outcomes. In this intricate context, continuous trade-offs arise between individual patient needs and population-level efficiency, with decentralized decisions frequently resulting in poor resource utilization. Optimizing patient flow requires hospitals to adopt a dual approach: combining flexibility and autonomy with centralization and structure to safeguard overall efficiency.

The practical contributions offer policymakers and hospital leaders actionable frameworks for diagnosing flow-related barriers, designing effective strategies, and tailoring processes to patient volume and complexity. These insights provide a foundation for improving hospital-wide throughput and addressing the pressing challenges facing modern healthcare systems.

Efficiency

Healthcare

Hospital-wide

Patient logistics

Productivity

Patient flow

Vasa B, Vera Sandbergs allé, Chalmers, Göteborg
Opponent: Bonnie Poksinska, Linköpings universitet, Sverige

Författare

Philip Åhlin

Supply and Operations Management 00

Solutions for improved hospital-wide patient flows – a qualitative interview study of leading healthcare providers

BMC Health Services Research,;Vol. 23(2023)

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Åhlin, P., Hermansson, S. & Almström, P. Focused operations to improve the patient flow in full-service healthcare organizations

Åhlin, P., Almström, P. & Wänström, C. Operationalizing hospital-wide patient flows: A multiple-case study of leading academic hospitals

Åhlin, P. Bottom-up perspectives on hospital-wide patient flow – A multi-site qualitative study of solutions to organizational paradoxes

Hospitals face a paradox: while medicine and technology advance rapidly, the flow of patients through hospitals often remains slow and uneven. Emergency rooms overflow, beds are scarce, staff are under pressure — and yet patients wait. Why does this happen, and how can we fix it?
 
My research explores one of healthcare’s biggest operational challenges: how to create swifter and smoother patient flows across entire hospitals. Based on real-world studies, it shows that delays are rarely caused only by a lack of staff or beds. Instead, problems often stem from fragmented decision-making, competing priorities, and routines that make departments work in silos.
 
My findings show that hospitals perform best when coordination is done centrally, but in a supportive way that helps rather than controls. Another key result is that hospitals benefit from separating routine, predictable cases from complex ones — allowing each to be managed more effectively. Importantly, frontline staff welcome these changes, as they may ease daily frustrations and improve care and work conditions.
 
This research offers practical frameworks that connect barriers, root causes, and solutions, giving healthcare managers and policymakers new tools to rethink hospital operations. The message is clear: improving patient flow, taking a hospital-wide view, is not just a technical fix, but a strategic necessity — vital for patients, professionals, and the long-term sustainability of healthcare.

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Industriell ekonomi

Hälso- och sjukvårdsorganisation, hälsopolitik och hälsoekonomi

Styrkeområden

Produktion

Hälsa och teknik

DOI

10.63959/chalmers.dt/5754

ISBN

978-91-8103-296-3

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5754

Utgivare

Chalmers

Vasa B, Vera Sandbergs allé, Chalmers, Göteborg

Opponent: Bonnie Poksinska, Linköpings universitet, Sverige

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2025-10-02