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A Case Study in Improving Patient Flow

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Title: A Case Study in Improving Patient Flow


1
A Case Study in Improving Patient Flow
2
What is Lean?
  • The art of producing and delivering goods and
    services that deliver maximum value to the
    customer with minimal waste in the process. 
  • Doing the right things (as defined by your
    customer) and doing them better, faster, and
    cheaper.
  • A process management philosophy
  • Derived in large part from the Toyota Production
    System (TPS)
  • Later successfully adapted in a wide variety of
    business settings manufacturing, maintenance
    repair, healthcare, professional services, office
    processes

3
Growth and Spread of Lean
4
Growth and Spread of Lean
5
Lean Principles
  • Define value in the customers terms.
  • Understand what it is that your customer values
    and is willing to pay for.
  • Map and define the value stream. 
  • The series of actions that collectively build
    value for the customer is the value stream. 
    Identify and eliminate non-value added
    activities.
  • Make value flow. 
  • Strive to implement a process in which
    value-creating activities can move quickly,
    seamlessly, with minimal effort and without
    backtracking or rework.
  • Pull from later processes to earlier ones. 
  • Have the cadence, or rhythm of activity, driven
    by being pulled from the customer at the end of
    the process, rather than pushed by the producer
    or supplier to the process.
  • Continually strive for perfection.
  • Constantly learn and improve.

6
  • Waiting- Time spent waiting on items required to
    complete a task (i.e., Information, supplies,
    etc.)
  • Unnecessary Motion- Any motion that does not add
    value to a product or service.
  • Processing- Effort and time spent processing that
    is not adding value
  • Inventory- Waiting for processing
  • Moving items- Transporting by mail, cart, or foot
    travel
  • Making too much -Producing more than the ultimate
    customer requires
  • Fixing defects- Time spent repairing or reworking
  • Under-utilised intellect- Failure to use peoples
    creativity and intelligence

Waste is anything that the customer is not
willing to pay for
7
St. Jamess Lean Event
  • A workshop was held in January 2009
  • Target improvements in the Haematology / Oncology
    Daycare Centre (HODC) unit
  • Improve patient flow and reduce waiting times
  • Increase capacity without adding resources
    (headcount, area, capital)
  • Reduce costs
  • Cross-functional team identified 34 improvements
    and designed new processes to improve patient
    flow and units performance

8
The Psychology of Queues
  • Unoccupied time feels longer than occupied time.
  • Pre-process waits feel longer than in-process
    waits.
  • Anxiety makes waits seem longer.
  • Uncertain waits seem longer than known, finite
    waits.
  • Unfair waits are longer than equitable waits.
  • The more valuable the service, the longer the
    customer is willing to wait.
  • Solo waits feel longer than group waits.

Source David Maister, The Psychology of Waiting
Lines
9
As Is Process Oncology
  • Typical path (treatment with pre-made drugs)
    through this process takes 7 hours 50 minutes
  • Patient queuing/idle time is 3 hours 10 minutes
    (40 of total)
  • More than 3.5 hours elapses from the time the
    patient arrives until chemotherapy begins, 92 of
    which is spend queuing or waiting
  • Patients receiving no intervention (consultation
    only) take 2 hours 15 minutes, 79 of which is
    queuing or waiting

10
Problems Issues Registration
The team identified problems and issues that
arise in the current process, grouped by major
steps in the process. The following were
identified in reception and scheduling
  • Overbooking of patients and simultaneous bookings
  • Medical charts removed from unit without
    permission or record
  • No system for dealing with unscheduled patients
    (walk ins)
  • Patient arriving at wrong appointment time
  • Major interruptions
  • Appropriate bloods not ordered
  • Demand led service with no cap on activity

11
Suggested Actions Reception
The team brainstormed actions and changes that
would help address the identified problems. The
following were agreed in the area of reception
and scheduling
12
To Be Processes
  • The team next identified new ways of structuring
    the treatment process to improve patient flow
  • The concept of takt time (process pace or
    rhythm) was introduced
  • Takt time was calculated at 6 minutes/process
    step and activities were grouped into 6 minute
    units of standard work
  • Four separate processes were defined
  • Same-day treatment (similar to As Is process)
  • Two-day treatment (optional to the patient) with
    blood submitted on day prior
  • Haematology direct treatment, with no lab
    analysis required
  • Clinic only, with blood testing and doctor
    consultation but no treatment administered

13
Clinic Process (Reception, Phlebotomy,
Consultation)
14
To Be Process Same Day Treatment
  • Typical path (treatment with pre-compounded
    drugs) should take 5.5 hours (30 reduction
    compared to As Is)
  • Patient queuing/idle time is 62 minutes (19 of
    total, 67 reduction compared to As Is)
  • Also planned new optional 2 day process for
    some patients

15
To Be Process Two Day Treatment
  • Process should take patient lt 15 minutes on first
    day, 4.5 hours on second day (for 4 hour
    treatment)
  • Total queuing/idle time lt 10 minutes (95
    reduction compared to As Is process, 85 less
    than To Be same day process)
  • Dramatic reduction in waiting offsets
    inconvenience of making two visits
  • Medium-term goal is to allow off-site submission
    of blood sample (GP, regional hospital, etc.)
  • Initial target is for 12 patients/day to opt for
    two day treatment (1/3 of total treatments)

16
Follow Up Steps
  • Internal communications
  • Action Plans and follow up
  • 34 Individual action items (80 are small, simple
    improvements that take six weeks or less)
  • Evaluate physical layout and possible
    improvements
  • Field trip to an industry reference site
  • Follow on lean activities
  • Visual Controls
  • 5S
  • Broader staff training
  • Waiting time audit
  • Patient satisfaction survey

17
Learn From Others Best Practices
  • Manufacturing
  • Visual Controls / 5S
  • Flow and standard work techniques
  • Aviation
  • Checklists
  • Crew Resource Management
  • Other Healthcare Organisations

18
  • Patient flow
  • Operating theatre turnover
  • Scheduling
  • Workplace disorganisation
  • Medical records
  • Inventory control
  • Equipment availability
  • Bed management
  • Shift change processes

19
Early Successes
  • Less crowding, shorter waiting times
  • Pharmacy process 75 reduction in unplanned
    chemotherapy, increased productivity, Minimised
    patient risk
  • Improved employee morale teamwork
  • All levels and functions working together to
    improve
  • Clinics finishing on time
  • Cost savings
  • Reduced overtime
  • Improved clinical codingbetter data on actual
    treatments delivered, more accurate funding
    allocation
  • Labour utilisation and throughput capacity
  • Reduced drug wastage and increased productivity
    in manufacturing unit

20
Audit of Waiting Times
  • Results being analysedto be presented at the
    conference

21
5S Office Event
  • 5S sort, set in order, shine, standardize,
    sustain
  • The foundation of a visual workplace
  • Challenges
  • Staff perception that it is overkill
  • Maintaining an agreed level of order
  • Sustaining impetus after preliminary event
  • Changing mindsets to think 5S
  • Finding a local champion on the shop floor

Before
After
22
Employee Satisfaction
  • Chief II Pharmacist (Clinical) - Planned
    Chemotherapy is good Chemotherapy, the new
    appointment system has resulted in a significant
    reduction in unplanned chemotherapy
  • Chief II Pharmacist (Chemotherapy manufacturing)
    The scheduled collection times for
    chemotherapy has changed the way we work to a
    great extent. It has allowed us to structure our
    manufacturing around delivery times resulting in
    increase productivity and reduced wastage
  • Admin Clerical - Not racing against the clock
    all the time
  • Less stressed, more time to concentrate on the
    task in hand
  • Nursing - Patients are now arriving in the
    dayward at their appointed time
  • I think we could treat more patients with the
    staff we have when this is fully implemented
  • Consultant - This system has eliminated the
    peaks and troughs of patient flow. I am assured
    of a smooth flow of patients over the course of
    my clinic. It also enables me to include more
    training opportunities for teaching junior staff

23
Challenges
  • Changing cultural norms behaviour
  • Employees
  • Punctuality
  • Queue discipline
  • Feeling of loss of control (By somemost prefer
    new system.)
  • Learning to focus on flow, resist urge to fight
    fires
  • Patients
  • Adherence to appointment times
  • Maintaining momentum after initial progress

24
Future plans
  • Implement mini-kaizen in the workplace staff
    encouraged to come up with ideas that could
    improve job activity, environment and reduce
    waste
  • Patient Satisfaction Survey Planned for August
    2009
  • Visual controls for patients and staff

25
Conclusion
  • Industry visit was an eye-opener
  • Workplace organisation
  • Mistake proofing
  • Visual shop
  • Handover systems
  • 5S
  • Continuous flow
  • Level loading of work
  • The state of the process is obvious, to anyone,
    instantly
  • Lean principles and techniques are powerful and
    applicable to healthcare
  • Productivity gains
  • Staff enrichment
  • Patient experience

26
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