| Literature DB >> 22296919 |
Pamela Mazzocato1, Richard J Holden, Mats Brommels, Håkan Aronsson, Ulrika Bäckman, Mattias Elg, Johan Thor.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is growing interest in applying lean thinking in healthcare, yet, there is still limited knowledge of how and why lean interventions succeed (or fail). To address this gap, this in-depth case study examines a lean-inspired intervention in a Swedish pediatric Accident and Emergency department.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22296919 PMCID: PMC3298466 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-12-28
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Lean principles and examples of related practices in manufacturing (adapted from [26])
| Lean principles | Description of how principles work | Examples of related practices |
|---|---|---|
| Standardize work. | "All work shall be highly specified as to content, sequence, timing, and outcome" to reduce variation in how employees do their work. | Standardized job descriptions. |
| Connect people and machines that are dependent on one another. | "Every customer-supplier connection must be direct, and there must be an unambiguous yes-or-no way to send requests and receive responses." When a worker makes a request for parts or services there is no confusion about who is responsible for providing it, the number of units required or the type of service needed, and the timing of delivery. | |
| Create seamless, uninterrupted flow through the process. | "The pathways for every product and service must be simple and direct". All production lines are set up so that every product and service flows along a simple and specified pathway and goods and services do not flow to the next available person or machine but to a specific person or machine. | U-shaped physical layout (a layout that allows workers to move between the different tasks that compose a process in a flexible way), assembly line. |
| Empower staff to investigate problems with the process and to develop, test, and implement countermeasures using a "scientific method. | Staff members closest to the operations investigate root causes of a problem and develop "countermeasures" that are tested and implemented in accordance with the "scientific method" and under the guidance of a teacher. | Employee empowerment, |
Figure 1P-control chart for percentage of patients leaving the A&E within four hours. Special-cause variation is identified based on the decision rule: Nine consecutive points fall on the same side of the pre-lean baseline. The percentage of patients who leave the A&E within four hours pre-lean differs slightly from the value identified by the ANOVA as truncated values were used for the P-chart.
Figure 2I-chart for waiting time to see a physician. Special-cause variation is identified based on the decision rules: Any single data point outside the 3σ limit; Nine consecutive points fall on the same side of the pre-lean baseline.
Figure 3Care process at the pediatric A&E.
Improvement principles used at the A&E
| Principle | Description of the principle |
|---|---|
| Visualize | All people involved in the care process should have an overview of what happens, where one's colleagues are and where the patient is in the care chain. |
| Link patient care activities | The various activities that compose a patient's care process should, if possible, be linked together or even be performed in parallel. |
| Takt (work pace) | Different activities can take different time, but the goal is to decrease the variability in the time to complete each step in the process and to achieve a steady work pace to meet projected demand. |
| First-time quality | By getting things right the first time, quality is improved and the need for rework is reduced. |
| Standardize | To the extent possible, patient care processes should be standardized to reduce wasteful patient-to-patient variability. |
| Continual improvement | Processes and practices can be adjusted several times-by testing, evaluating, and trying again, using a scientific approach-before work flows smoothly |
Categorizing the intervention's [39] components using four lean principles
| Lean principles | Intervention's components |
|---|---|
| Standardize work. | Specific new job roles-flow manager, team nurse and nurse's aide, and team physician-with job descriptions. |
| Connect people that are dependent on one another. | Team-based organization and changes to work station location. |
| Create seamless, uninterrupted flow through the process. | Centralized management of the patient flow by flow managers, and changes in their work station location. |
| Empower staff to investigate problems with the process and to develop, test, and implement countermeasures using a "scientific method". | Stable structures for continual improvement (team approach to problem solving and coach supervision, and takt board) involving also management (monthly meetings with the management group). |