Grand River Hospital and St Mary s General Hospital Increases Throughput, Cuts Costs using Lean

Similar documents
Continuous Quality Improvement Made Possible

Improving the Delivery of Troponin Results to the Emergency Department using Lean Methodology

Improving Pain Center Processes utilizing a Lean Team Approach

Improving Clinical Flow ECHO Collaborative Change Package

Spectrum Health Medical Group. Academic General Pediatrics Clinic Grand Rapids, Michigan, US. Case Study

Three Steps to Streamline Laboratory Operations:

Building a Lean Team. Using Lean Methodology to Develop a Collaborative Rounding Model. April 28 th, 2010

LEAN Transformation Storyboard 2015 to present

Fordingbridge. Hearts At Home Care Limited. Overall rating for this service. Inspection report. Ratings. Requires Improvement

NURS 6051: Transforming Nursing and Healthcare through Information Technology Electronic Health Records Program Transcript

Martin Nesbitt Tape 36. Q: You ve been NCNA s legislator of the year 3 times?

NEW INNOVATIONS TO IMPROVE PATIENT FLOW IN THE ED AND HOSPITAL OCTOBER 12, Mike Williams, MPH/HSA The Abaris Group

PURPOSE: This policy provides an overview of SHANDS Jacksonville Laboratory s commitment to the care and safety of the patients we serve.

MLA Advisory Committee to Review Eligible Organizations Access to and Distribution of Proceeds from Licensed Casino Events

Bluewater Health. Sarnia/Lambton, Ontario, Canada. Case Study

MERCY MEDICAL CENTER. Mercy Medical Center Improves Patient Care, Lowers Costs with the Hospital Operating System

The Evolution of ASC Joint Ventures: Key Trends for Value-Based Care

Ambulatory Emergency Care The Logical Way to Go

Building a Lean healthcare machine

Specialty Care System Performance Measures

WHITE PAPER. Transforming the Healthcare Organization through Process Improvement

Lab Quality Confab Process Improvement Institute. New Orleans, LA. John Waugh 11/3/2015

VENICE FAMILY CLINIC: Improving capacity and managing patient lead times

Elizabeth Woodcock, MBA, FACMPE, CPC

Identifying step-down bed needs to improve ICU capacity and costs

Interview. With Ximena Munoz- Manitoba s Fairness Commissioner. CRRF: What is the mandate of the office of Fairness Commissioner?

South Warwickshire s Whole System Approach Transforms Emergency Care. South Warwickshire NHS Foundation Trust

Emergency Department Throughput

Fast Track Development at Aultman Hospital

A Publication for Hospital and Health System Professionals

Charting the Course for Change

The Cost of a Misfiled Medical Document

WWS Health & Wellness Center. Participant Information Guide

September Workforce pressures in the NHS

HOW 5S ORGANIZING BOOSTS MONEY, TIME, AND PATIENT OUTCOMES

REDESIGNING ALLIED HEALTH OUTPATIENTS - Lean Thinking Applications to Allied Health

Improving ED Flow through the UMLN II

IHI Open School Advanced Case Study October 14, 2010 Clemson University

The Value of Creating Simple and Seamless Collaboration

uncovering key data points to improve OR profitability

Strong Medicine Interview with Cheryl Webber, 20 June ILACQUA: This is Joan Ilacqua and today is June 20th, 2014.

LPS 5150 The Need for Reform Examples from the Field March 15, 2013

Preliminary Assessment on Request for Licensure Medical Laboratory Science Professionals Summary of Testimony and Evidence.

Broken Promises: A Family in Crisis

Managing Population Health in Northeast Georgia: One Medical Group's Experience

Composting at Home Pilot Phases 1 & 2 (March June 2014) Final Report (Condensed) November 7, 2014

Hendrick Medical Center significantly lowers turnover times with the help of OR Benchmarks Collaborative

Embracing Lean Management

Turning Point - Bradford

BEDSIDE REGISTRATION CAPE CANAVERAL HOSPITAL

Kim Baker, Chief Executive Officer, Central LHIN

Greetings from Michelle & Katie QUALITY IMPROVEMENT DIVISION OF HOSPITAL MEDICINE

Customer Situation Solution Benefits

Eliminating Common PACU Delays

Objective: To practice quality improvement tools by applying them to an improvement effort in an ambulatory care setting.

Excerpts from the Baltimore Community Foundation s Neighborhood Small Grants Program Evaluation

Webinar: Practical Approaches to Improving Patient Pre-Op Preparation

Simulering av industriella processer och logistiksystem MION40, HT Simulation Project. Improving Operations at County Hospital

Driving Business Value for Healthcare Through Unified Communications

CASE STUDY BLUESTONE PHYSICIAN SERVICES DELIVERING QUALITY CARE WITH DIGNITY TO SENIORS IN MINNESOTA, WISCONSIN, AND FLORIDA

Lowell General Hospital and Trace Reducing Claims Denials, Increasing Revenues and Improving Physician and Patient Satisfaction

What one lab has learned about using Real Time Analytics: A case study

Part 4. Change Concepts for Improving Adult Cardiac Surgery. In this section, you will learn a group. of change concepts that can be applied in

Helping healthcare: How Clinical Desktop can enrich patient care

When going Lean, Waste is the Enemy

Allied Healthcare Group Ltd - Dumfries Housing Support Service 1st Floor 22 Castle Street Dumfries DG1 1DR Telephone:

INSERIRE LOGO CLIENTE GRANDE SERVICE FACTORY. A real office where to learn from experience

A Step-by-Step Guide to Tackling your Challenges

MnCHOICES Assessment and Support Plan

University of Michigan Health System. Program and Operations Analysis. CSR Staffing Process. Final Report

Young Peoples Transition project: Focus Group Summary

JOB DESCRIPTION. Education: High School diploma or GED. Completion of an approved dental assisting program preferred.

Advanced Access Overview

University of Michigan Emergency Department

Documentation Training for Blood Product Administration At Hospital Corporation of America (HCA)

Improving hand hygiene compliance with innovative technology solutions

Understanding Health Care in America An introduction for immigrant patients

Summer 2018 Internship Program Position Packet. Our Mission

Coupons.com Accelerates Company Growth with

DELIVERING OUTSTANDING IMPROVEMENTS AT CANADA S WILLIAM OSLER HEALTHCARE SYSTEM

National review of domiciliary care in Wales. Monmouthshire County Council

When and How to Introduce Palliative Care

McMaster Health Forum Dialogue Summary Modernizing the Oversight of the Health Workforce in Ontario 21 September Evidence >> Insight >> Action

MBCHD and CARS Use myavatar EHR to Facilitate Care for 6,000 Patients

Why Task-Based Training is Superior to Traditional Training Methods

Santa Clara s County s Benefit Service Center

A1 Home Care. A1 Home Care Ltd. Overall rating for this service. Inspection report. Ratings. Good

Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service

DME Competitive Bidding Case manager/discharge Planner Satisfaction Survey Better Same Worse Comment Totals 416 Yes and No Question's Yes Comment

Decreasing Environmental Services Response Times

Website: Tel: , Topaz Medical EMR. Official Users Guide

The Power of Quality. Lindsay R. Smith, MSN,RN Quality Manager Vanderbilt Transplant Center

Enhancing the Patient Experience in the Physician Practice

2010 Pittsburgh Regional Health Initiative

City of Edinburgh Council

We are the regulator: Our job is to check whether hospitals, care homes and care services are meeting essential standards.

Neurosurgery Clinic Analysis: Increasing Patient Throughput and Enhancing Patient Experience

Marie Curie Nursing Service - Care at Home Support Service Care at Home Marie Curie Hospice - Glasgow 133 Balornock Road Stobhill Hospital Grounds

HOME Commitment Interim Rule January 12, 2017

Transcription:

LEAN CASE STUDY: Grand River Hospital and St Mary s General Hospital Increases Throughput, Cuts Costs using Lean In healthcare today, having to do more with less goes with the territory. Volumes are increasing five to ten percent every year, regulatory and administrative burdens are becoming more restrictive, and wait times are rising. Already stretched providers struggle to keep up, even as healthcare consumes a growing chunk of the provinces budgets. These symptoms had been all too familiar at the pathology department of Grand River Hospital. For years, they faced complaints over long wait times, backlogs of work, and frustrated staff. All in all it was a pretty chaotic environment, and highly stressful, says Vince D Mello, Integrated Laboratory Administrative Director at Grand River and St Mary s General Hospital. We never seemed to be getting out of the circle of events. It was very difficult to pinpoint what the real issues were, says Dr. Dimitrios Divaris, Chief Pathologist at the Kitchener-based hospital. We were always doing quick fixes, so the problems kept recurring. It just wasn't sustainable. The lab was under-staffed, but D Mello, who had prior experience with lean, knew that the root of their troubles lay deeper than that. Their department was trapped in a siloed environment where departments the pathology lab, nursing, technical support, etc. were self-contained and independent from one another. This caused several critical problems; work cells were blaming each other when something WWW.LEANADVISORS.COM

went wrong; departments were competing for resources; and staff efforts were conflicting with one another. A fundamentally different approach was needed - one that could break down these barriers and get everybody working together with the patients interests in mind. D Mello got approval to introduce lean to the department, and through a competitive process opted to bring in Lean Advisors as consultants. Getting up to Speed All lean journeys begin with education. Front-line workers the primary change agents need to understand not only how lean will help them make a difference, but also why it is important to do so. Without this source of motivation, their efforts can become little more than lip service. D Mello began by getting representatives from all departments in the same room. Working with Lean Advisors Vice President of Client Services, Mike Boucher, he created a crossfunctional team that would provide the spark for a lean transformation. Among the nine team members was a pathologist, Grand River s medical director, their department manager, senior technologists, and technologists from the non-pathology lab sections. Boucher outlined the lean view of the pathology department for the group, showing how the traditional silo approach encourages departments to focus only on their internal needs. Lean, he explained, would break down barriers and create a system where every staff member s activities were linked to the needs of the patient. Mike acted as a mediator more than WWW.LEANADVISORS.COM

anything, says Kerry Lackie, transfusion medicine technologist at the lab. He steered the committee with questions, but he never gave specific answers on what to do. Those came from the people on the committee themselves. Next, Boucher introduced the team to value stream mapping (VSM), a lean technique that maps the flow of all information, materials, and activities leading to the desired outcome for the customer or patient. The journey of a blood sample through the lab from receipt by the pathology department to the presentation of lab results to the patient s physician is a good example. In the mapping process, team members draw up two representations similar to flowcharts - one of the present, pre-lean state, and the other of the future state, whereby waste has been eliminated wherever possible. In healthcare, waste includes walking by staff, waiting, paperwork, or any activity or outlay that doesn t improve the wellness of the patient. Reducing this in every way possible is an ongoing mission for lean organizations. VSM also teaches staff how the various parts of the organization interact. A secretary, for example, can better understand how patient information is used by technologists/technicians, doctors, and other staff. This transparency makes waste visible to everybody in the organization. Finding the Cure The first priority for the Grand River lean team was the pathology department s growing backlog. In a telling example of staff frustrations, one technologist had said to D Mello, Vince WWW.LEANADVISORS. COM

it's like this: I come to work on a Monday morning, and I have a backlog in front of me. I leave at five o'clock on a Friday, and I still have a backlog. Something has got to give. In the current state, samples were divided into three groups: biopsies, routine samples, and large cases. The process had three phases: Pre-analytical, where a technologist and/or technical assistant sorted samples and matched them with relevant medical data. Analytical, where samples were prepared for analysis. Post-analytical, where the slides were delivered to the pathologist, who would make the diagnosis, write up the report, and send it to the physician who had ordered the test. The problem was that there was no integration between the three stages. Technologists would deliver samples to the pathologists based on pre-assignment regardless of how busy the doctors were, and the samples would pile up on their desks for days, or even weeks. The congestion would eventually work its way back down the line, forcing technologists to constantly re-prioritize their work. There was no visibility whatsoever, says D Mello. Ultimately, it concluded with unhappy clients, and reports not being generated in a timely manner. We weren t meeting the needs of the patient. The lean team responded by creating a future state map that eliminated the barriers between these phases, and outlined a smooth flow of work and information between them. We adopted a vision that we needed to go forward with, says D Mello, and that's when the rubber hit the road. WWW.LEANADVISORS.COM

The lean team s goal was to increase throughput to 150 samples a day a 22% increase over the current state level. To achieve this, the accessioning of data was re-assigned to clerical staff, who s superior typing skills helped eliminate the previous backlog of 20 cases per day. This change also gave technologists more time to better utilize their professional skills. The pathology department also changed the system of case assignment. Previously, samples were pre-assigned to pathologists based on case type and severity, then hand delivered to the pathologists. This created imbalances for example, there was a disproportionate share of biopsies chosen and assignments had to be constantly readjusted to maintain a balanced distribution of case complexity between the available pathologists. Consequently, technologists were frequently wasting their valuable time running back and forth. The lean team replaced the old system with a construct known as a lean supermarket, sonamed after the food store equivalent where selections are presented to the consumer and continually re-stocked according to demand. At Grand River, the consumers are the pathologists who visit a central stocking area where samples are drawn out of slots. Each slot represents a day of the week, and is expected to be empty by the end of the day. An important aspect of the new system was the replacement of the previous pick and choose approach with a first-in, first-out model. This ensured a smooth, consistent workflow, a lean goal that ensures maximum efficiency. With the supermarket in place, samples were no longer being pushed through the system while pathologists scrambled to keep up. Now, the doctors in response to patient demand determined the pace of the work flow, and the rest of the system responded to those demands. In lean, this is known as a pull system. WWW.LEANADVISORS. COM

The biggest benefit of the supermarket was that it didn't matter if you were a technician, or a pathologist, or a technical assistant, says D Mello, you could see what was outstanding on a daily basis, or weekly basis in the supermarket. Everything became transparent. The results speak for themselves. Before implementing the supermarket model, Grand River had a backlog of roughly 14 days. Six weeks after implementing lean, it dropped to two days. The pathology department s costs have dropped, too. A $45,000 investment in lean initiatives is expected to save over $117,000 every year, thanks to the elimination of wasteful processes, and a significant reduction in overtime hours. It s phenomenal, says Lackie. There s no longer the underlying sense of drowning. There s light at the end of the tunnel. In a post-lean survey of hospital staff, 50% said that bottlenecks and backlogs had been reduced significantly, and 38% said they had been reduced marginally. Keys to Success Because lean relies on front-line workers to provide solutions, managing people s fears and resistances is essential. D Mello addressed this by emphasizing open dialogue. We were very transparent with our communications and our strategies, he says. Communication is a two-way street. When pathologists were initially showing skepticism, Boucher met with them to discuss their concerns. That was a turning point to get them on board, says Boucher. I have to give them credit when they supported the initiative, even though they were nervous about it. They really came through. Dr. Divaris who had wanted to implement lean for years WWW.LEANADVISORS.COM

was, as chief pathologist, also instrumental in providing leadership on this front. The enthusiasm of the lean team gave the project the energy and enthusiasm it needed to succeed. Members described their co-workers as hard working, open to new ideas, and respectful of each other s opinions. The sessions were fabulous, say Lackie. The first session said check your egos, hats and qualifications at the door, and this committee took that to heart. Team chemistry like this is essential not only for launching a lean transformation, but also for sustaining it for months and years to come. The true spirit of lean is all about continuously improving, and understanding that a lean journey is never really over. I think it starts with effective leadership, says D Mello, and with having an engaging vision that is evidence-based, and patient-focused. If we just embrace those strategies, if we put the interests of the patient first, and then start strategizing around that to engage leadership, and engage workers, we can find a solution. The team at Grand River succeeded because they discovered how to work together in a collaborative and respectful manner rather than only for the good of their department to better serve the patient. As Dr. Divaris says, If the pathologists have a problem, the operational side has a problem, and vice versa. We are, after all, like partners in a three legged race. We can run together, we can stumble together, or we can fall together. One thing is for certain; we cannot go our separate ways. WWW.LEANADVISORS. COM