Probably should ask why coolant is changed. Coolant breaks down over time, and the additive package of chemicals that inhibit corrosion, etc. are used up. Cooling systems are closed systems. The only way crap gets in there is if its there from manufacturing, or someone puts it there, or if the coolant hasn't been changed in this century and has deteriorated. That is not what I'm talking about here, I'm talking about well maintained systems that are functioning normally.
Given this information, I moved to a partial replacement method years ago and it has stood me well, never had any coolant issues on anything I own. So here it is: Whatever the recommended coolant change interval is, cut it in half. That is the new change interval. Pull off hose, open valve, etc. at the lowest point you can find in the system. Whatever drains out, drains out. Close up system, re-fill with fresh coolant, burp system, run engine, etc. check for leaks and return to service.
Every cooling system I've ever seen will dump at least 60-70+% of its volume just by removing the lower hose, or draining at the lowest point. When I've been able to I measure what is drained, I compare it to the capacity specifications its always been most of the coolant in the system. The more frequent change cycle more that replenishes the additive packages, and I'm convinced the new silicate-free coolant formulations make flushing a relic of the past. When I do have to crack into a cooling system, they have been clean as a whistle inside, so it appears to work.
I realize this is anecdotal, and goes against conventional wisdom, but I've done it successfully for a couple decades on multiple vehicles, some of which now have 330+K on the odo.
YRMV, don't try this at home, etc.