Graph-Theoretic Measures for Interpretable Multicriteria Decision Making in Emergency Department Layout Optimization
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Apr 15, 2025
Abstract
Overcrowding in emergency departments (ED) is a persistent problem
exacerbated by population growth, emergence of pandemics, and increased
morbidity and mortality rates. Thus, automated approaches for ED layout design
have recently emerged as promising tools for boosting healthcare service
quality. Still, ED design typically involves multiple conflicting objectives,
where the interpretability of the associated solutions depends on the
availability of intuitive metrics that can capture ED layout complexity. In
this paper, we propose graph-theoretic measures to evaluate and rank ED layouts
produced by a multi-objective metaheuristic optimization framework with the
non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA-II) and generalized differential
evolution (GDE3). Indeed, Pareto-optimal ED layouts were sought to minimize
patient flow cost while maximizing closeness between ED service areas. Then,
the layouts were evaluated based on local graph measures (degree centrality,
betweenness, clustering coefficient, closeness centrality, nodal strength, and
eccentricity) as well as global ones (global efficiency, network characteristic
path length and transitivity). Then, a multi-criteria decision-making technique
was employed to rank the layouts based on either the objective functions, the
graph measures, or combinations of both. The ranking results on a real-world
scenario show that the top-ranking layouts are the ones with the best
graph-theoretic values. This shows that the graph-theoretic measures can
enhance solution interpretability and hence help medical planners in selecting
the best layouts. In comparison with the input layout, optimal NSGA-II and GDE3
solutions reduce the patient flow cost by 18.32% and 11.42%, respectively.
Also, the two solutions improve the closeness by 14.5% and 18.02%,
respectively.