During my years as a social worker and in all the
educational courses and training I have participated in towards the goal of
being an effective and trustworthy social worker, one of the things stressed
repeatedly was that when a consumer/client is entered into the program, the process
should also be started for ending the relationship with that individual or
family unit. It was surprising to me to read about the lack of planning for
outpatient resources in the “Factory Efficiency…” article. I never, ever, would have equated supply
chain management with the work we did with our families and children. However, it makes good practical (and
ethical) sense to have a vision of the end at the beginning.
By the time a Toyota is ready for the assembly line they
know exactly what the car is supposed to look like, inside and out. Before a counselor has reached the maximum
number of hours with a client they should
know what the next direction is going to be. It is a disservice to all involved to pretend
that a discharge plan never entered into the process. The tools are available, workbooks, groups,
conversation, journal writing assignments.
All of these things tie together to make quality service provision a
reality.
Additionally, the duplication of forms has long been a
nuisance to counselors and managers of social service departments. Every reporting organization has their own
requirements and they are duplicates.
From my earliest days of working with youth, complaints were bountiful
about the repetition of information in written form relative to one individual
or family unit.
What does this have to do with the concept of lean manufacturing? Principles and application. Everything from session scheduling to post-discharge
follow-up to outreach and community event planning could have benefited from
the principles of lean manufacturing.
The increased outcomes could be in the form of better
counselor-counselee rapport; less last minute chart writing; less high stress
days when reports and chart reviews are done; more time during the day to see
clients; less time spent looking for things not in the designated place. The list is long.
Why is it that these principles are slow to reach the
community and social service areas? I’d argue that it is because many of these
organizations are focused on what is immediately in front of them including
budget issues and licensing regulations.
The idea of bringing in a new way to think about how services are
provided would rock the proverbial boat.
(At least at one of my previous
jobs.)
Am I willing to rock the boat? If the answer is no, then the next question
should be How do I intend to make a difference in the lives of those I work
with if I am not willing to make a change myself. Certainly not every client is the same, but
if all the staff made the effort to provide their best service without
overlooking things such as dates and signatures, the time and worry spent
ensuring that licensing regulations are met always and daily, the day to day
work would flow much easier and the focus would be solely on providing the best
service to the client base.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.