With
healthcare costs on the rise and currently accounting for 18% of our GDP, any
processes that increase efficiency, improve processes and effectively reduce costs
should be explored. Processes in the
healthcare sector should thus be geared towards becoming more lean and increase
value by decreasing waste. This concept
became very apparent when I completed a project in my Health Care Quality and
Process Improvement course. My group
members and I shadowed patients upon their entry to three different clinical
sites. Among our deliverables was a time
study, which assessed the value added and non-value added time. From this analysis we were able to see that
there was almost an equal amount of value added and non-value added time. This demonstrated that there was waste within
these three clinical sites and improvements could be made to make the processes
more efficient and more lean.
Lean
processes also focus on continuous improvement, which enables focus to be
continually on patient safety and quality medical treatment. These processes also improve efficiency, which
will ultimately reduce costs. For
example, initiatives such as creating effective material restocking processes,
increasing capacity by using current equipment and available space and focusing
on preventing errors that would increase a patient’s length of stay would
directly decrease costs for an organization[1].
An example of a medical center that
has worked hard to implement lean processes includes Virginia Mason Medical
Center in Seattle who implemented their own version of the Toyota Production
System, or the Virginia Mason Production System (VMPS). This system has focused on areas including,
but not limited to a no layoff policy and a defect alert system. The no layoff policy enables lean management
to take place as workers were more willing to engage in improvements once they
did not felt as if their job was threatened.
The defect alert system is similar to Toyota’s assembly line where anyone
is able to “stop the line” when they see a mistake. Virginia Mason has implemented a similar
concept where they can stop care if someone sees a mistake and will call the
patient safety department and someone will come to assess the situation and conduct
a root cause analysis. These processes,
and the others implemented created efficiency and financial gains as well as helped
to advance clinical improvements at Virginia Mason[2].
What are
other ways in which healthcare organizations have already implemented lean
processes to reduce their costs and decrease waste? What are new ways in which this can be
achieved in healthcare?
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