Skip to Main Content
Boston University
  • Bostonia
  • BU-Today
  • The Brink
  • University Publications

    • Bostonia
    • BU-Today
    • The Brink
Other Publications
BU-Today
  • Sections
News, Opinion, Community

Saving the ER for emergencies

New plan eliminates cancellations and cuts costs

August 4, 2006
  • John Thompson
Twitter Facebook
Eugene Litvak, SMG professor of health care and operations management and MVP director

Many people worry about the impact of epidemics and terrorist attacks on the nation’s hospitals, but the unfortunate truth is that our emergency care system is already stretched to the breaking point. Once a minute in this country an ambulance is turned away from an overcrowded hospital.

“The emergency care system in this country is close to disastrous,” says Eugene Litvak, a research professor and director of the Management of Variability Program (MVP) at BU’s Health Policy Institute. “Ambulances are constantly diverted from the hospitals; patients wait for hours and hours. It’s absolutely unacceptable.”

Litvak has an answer. His MVP methodology has been tested in several hospitals with deeply encouraging results, both in reducing costs and in providing better care. It works, Litvak says, by addressing the variability of patient intakes: scheduled intakes are deemed an artificial variability, while emergency room intakes are a natural variable. By better managing the artificial variability of scheduled intakes, hospitals can free up resources for emergency care, often with dramatic results. The cause of bottlenecks in emergency care often stems not from fluctuations in emergency arrivals, it turns out, but from irregularly scheduled elective care.

While that idea seems simple, until Litvak came along no one had put such a plan in place. And no one knew where to start.

“Health-care providers are not trained in operational management,” says Brad Prenney, deputy director of MVP, who had previously worked for 20 years with the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, where he oversaw emergency medical services and coordinated the department’s efforts to address ED overcrowding and ambulance diversion. “Our program bridges that gap.”  

Litvak, who earned a doctorate in operations research from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, immigrated to the United States in 1988. He had worked in Russia as an industrial efficiency expert at what was then the Soviet Ministry of Transportation, where he helped streamline the building of the nation’s railroads. When he arrived here, he turned his attention to health care.

“It is important to stress that the clinical care provided by doctors and nurses in this country is amazingly good,” he says. “However, service in the emergency departments is next to disastrous. It is a pity to have such impressive clinical care and such a terrible level of emergency service. People ask, ‘What would happen in a major epidemic or terrorist attack?’ My answer is that we are already in deep trouble without either of those.”

MVP has worked successfully with half a dozen hospitals around the country, starting with Boston Medical Center. Delays and cancellations of elective surgeries were nearly eliminated there after surgeons agreed to stop block scheduling and dedicate one operating room for urgent or emergency cases. BMC saw just 3 elective surgery cancellations in the period from April to September 2004, compared with 334 cancellations in that period a year earlier. Using Litvak’s methods, variability in the surgical stepdown unit was reduced by 55 percent, and nursing costs in the unit fell by an annualized amount of $130,000.

Since Litvak started the MVP program at BU in 2000, his methodology has proven itself   at several hospitals around the country, and front page stories have appeared in the Boston Globe and the Wall Street Journal. He recently was invited to join the Institute of Medicine committee The Future of Emergency Care in the United States Health System, where he served on the main committee and worked on one of the three reports commissioned by IOM — “Hospital-Based Emergency Care: At the Breaking Point.” Prenney was commissioned to write a paper titled “Patient Flow in Hospital-Based Emergency Services.”

“When the IOM committee speaks,” says Prenney, “the Congress and the nation listen. The IOM is a major voice in the direction of health care in this country.”

Litvak says he hopes that the report will make a huge change in the health-care system.  “It spells out the problem,” he says, “and it offers feasible ways of solving it.”

While Congress is calling together committees to address the MVP-inspired reports, Litvak already has his eyes set on his next goal. He wants to address the lack of operations management training for health-care providers.

“This is a national problem,” he says. “What our program does is close this gap, but we have to get more young people involved who have training in both areas. We have to find the right format to teach them. We are working on classes, seminars, and documents. Once we’ve developed the right structure and format, then we’ll bring it to the attention of the administration. Because of BMC and because we are working with many hospitals, BU would provide a unique environment to provide this training.”

Explore Related Topics:

  • Boston Medical Center
  • Business
  • Share this story

Share

Saving the ER for emergencies

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print

Latest from BU Today

  • Varsity Sports

    Women’s Basketball Advances to Patriot League Semifinals for First Time

  • Student Life

    Terriers in Charge: Elizabeth Slade (ENG’20)

  • Varsity Sports

    Men’s Basketball Terriers Go Head-to-Head with Colgate in Patriot League Championship Wednesday in New York

  • University News

    BU Puts Plan for Remote Learning in Place if Coronavirus Forces Campus Closure

  • Student Life

    Terriers in Charge: Valerie Nam (Sargent’20)

  • Varsity Sports

    BU Men’s Basketball Advances to Patriot League Semifinals, Hosts Bucknell Sunday

  • Fine Arts

    Accurate Art

  • Things-to-do

    Spring Break in Boston? There’s Lots on Offer

  • Varsity Sports

    Men’s Lacrosse Hungry to Take Program to Next Level

  • Campus Life

    BU Suspends Out-of-State Alternative Service Break Trips as Coronavirus Spreads

  • Student Clubs

    What’s New, What’s Hot on WTBU

  • Voices & Opinion

    POV: We Need Unemployment Insurance to Protect Workers and the Economy from Coronavirus

  • In the City

    Getting to Know Your Neighborhood: Roxbury

  • Arts & Culture

    Creator and Cast of ABC’s A Million Little Things Visits BU Tomorrow, Will Screen Latest Episode

  • Varsity Sports

    Women’s Lacrosse Sees Offense as Key to a 2020 Patriot League Championship

  • Computational Science

    Game Changer: Azer Bestavros’ Journey from Egypt to Cambridge to BU’s Computing Mastermind

  • Coronavirus

    Explaining BU’s Coronavirus Plan

  • Construction

    Private Development Project Advances Albany Street Makeover

  • University News

    BU Launches Coronavirus Website

  • Politics

    Video: Students on the Issues That Matter Most to Them in the 2020 Presidential Election

Section navigation

  • Sections
  • Must Reads
  • Videos
  • Series
  • Close-ups
  • Archives
  • About + Contact
Get Our Email

Explore Our Publications

Bostonia

Boston University’s Alumni Magazine

BU-Today

News, Opinion, Community

The Brink

Pioneering Research from Boston University

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Youtube
  • Linked-In
© Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
© 2025 Trustees of Boston UniversityPrivacy StatementAccessibility
Boston University
Notice of Non-Discrimination: Boston University policy prohibits discrimination against any individual on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, physical or mental disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic information, military service, pregnancy or pregnancy-related condition, or because of marital, parental, or veteran status, and acts in conformity with all applicable state and federal laws. This policy extends to all rights, privileges, programs and activities, including admissions, financial assistance, educational and athletic programs, housing, employment, compensation, employee benefits, and the providing of, or access to, University services or facilities. See BU’s Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Policy.
Search
Boston University Masterplate
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
Saving the ER for emergencies
0
share this