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Six Sigma In Healthcare

Six Sigma In Healthcare. By Trevor Coons Brigham Young University Marriott Business School. What Will Be Covered. Six Sigma defined in context of healthcare Brainstorming Exercises Nuts and Bolts How It Works Real World Examples Exercises Summary Reading List.

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Six Sigma In Healthcare

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  1. Six Sigma InHealthcare By Trevor Coons Brigham Young University Marriott Business School

  2. What Will Be Covered • Six Sigma defined in context of healthcare • Brainstorming Exercises • Nuts and Bolts • How It Works • Real World Examples • Exercises • Summary • Reading List

  3. Six Sigma Defined In Context of Healthcare Statistically • Sigma or σ is a character used in statisticsto represent standard deviation. • Six Sigma denote a process that is so in control that only 3.4 parts are defective for every million produced.

  4. Six Sigma Defined In Context of Healthcare As A Tool With Six Sigma Motorola company was able to • Eliminate waste • Improve quality • Reduce cost • Reduce lead time

  5. Six Sigma Defined In Context of Healthcare Coming To Healthcare • Quality improvement plan • Controlling variance is essential • Increases accountability • Builds off of current processes

  6. Brainstorming Exercises How could Six Sigma help? • First, come up with ideas how Six Sigma could improve healthcare as a whole • Next ,think about how Six Sigma principals could help your company • Lastly, think of ways that being able to create strong measures could help you in your job

  7. Brainstorming Exercises How could Six Sigma help? Scenario 1 • You are the manager over Lab and Imaging • You seem to be plagued by complaints about taking too long Scenario 2 • You are an Emergency Department Manger • A slue of seemingly indeterminable delays are frequently putting you on diversion

  8. Nuts and Bolts All or Nothing vs. Contingency • All or Nothing means that the company either fully commits to Six Sigma or else it shouldn’t bother - It offers greater rewards - But it comes at the cost of greater risk • Contingency • Allows a company to tailor its’ own solutions • If done half-hazard, it can cause more harm than good

  9. Nuts and BoltsAll or Nothing • Six Sigma Organization

  10. Nuts and BoltsAll or Nothing Organization- Champion • Works with the black belts • Meets frequently with Black belts • Identifies potential Black belts to train • Appropriates scarce resources • They have to balance internal and external concerns • Has final say on major projects and process changes

  11. Nuts and BoltsAll or Nothing Organization- Black belts • Heavily trained • Costs thousands of dollars and several month to train • Is a specialist in quality management tools • Full time job cost savings • Key to Six Sigma • Projects vary in duration and scope

  12. Nuts and BoltsAll or Nothing Organization- Green belts • Basic training • Trained in basic quality tools • Part time and often work in groups • Depending on the company • They can do Black belt work • Or green belts can be relegated lower priority projects

  13. Nuts and Bolts All or Nothing • Six Sigma Process DMAIC To best understand each of these steps, we’ll follow a case example of North Shore University Hospital as they apply these steps. (The bullets in blue.)

  14. Nuts and Bolts All or Nothing Process-DMAIC • Define • In specific terms explain what's wrong • Critical-to-quality factors • ED and PACU are diversion, Total Turnaround Time (TAT) taking too long, created a high-level process map • Measure • Create baseline • Collect data • Target TAT set to 120 min. and upper specification limit set to 150 min., defect defined as a TAT over 150 min., collected information on 195 patients

  15. Nuts and Bolts All or Nothing Process-DMAIC • Analyze • Use data to identify underlying problem • Created a Control Impact Matrix, performed hypothesis testing on what they could control, found the underling problem was employees lacked proficiency with the hospitals bed tracking system (BTS). • Improve • Implement process that will correct the problem • Improved communication within the staff by: documenting communication and reformatting admission RN’s beepers. Retraining employees on BTS and providing laminated instructions cards

  16. Nuts and Bolts All or Nothing Process-DMAIC • Control • Monitoring the process • TAT continued to be monitored on a monthly basis • Results • Went from a slightly over one sigma process to a 3.1 sigma process • Cut standard deviation from 170 minutes to 48 minutes • The average TAT went from 226 minutes to 69 minutes

  17. Nuts and BoltsContingency Advice for Implementing on Contingency • Manage expectations • Manage for the correct outcomes • Pick manageable problems • Engage the customer • Measure the right thing

  18. How It Works Project types • Patient Satisfaction • Safety • Efficiency • Outcomes • Many Others

  19. How It Works Performance Variables • Patient Satisfaction • Service Level • Service Cost • Clinical Excellence

  20. How It Works Physician Engagement • Why it is essential • Why so hard to get • Think differently • Increases burdens • How to gain

  21. Real World Examples

  22. Exercises You are trying to figure out what Sigma level your at • You take meticulous notes of what’s going on in your unit and observe 195 turnovers • 130 of those observations were defects • Calculate defects per million opportunities (DPMO) (Hint) (Defects/ (Opportunities* Occurrences) ) X 1,000,000

  23. Exercises Activities to use in your meeting • Managers go on a quality waste walk • Discuss training you’d like to pursue in your company • Work to reduce reliance on competitive data for improvement initiatives • Discuss how to improve physician engagement

  24. Summary • Six Sigma defined in context of healthcare • Brainstorming Exercises • Nuts and Bolts • How It Works • Real World Examples • Exercises

  25. Reading List • “Crossing the Quality Chasm- A new healthcare system for the 21st century”. Institute of medicine. National Academy Press. Washington D.C. 2001 • “To Err is Human- Building a Safer Health System”. Institute of medicine. National Academy Press. Washington D.C. 2000 • Gawande, Atul. “Better- A Surgeon’s Notes on Performance.” New York: Henry Holt and Company, 2007 • “Addressing Variation in Hospital Quality: Is Six Sigma the Answer?”. Woodard, Tanisha D. Journal of Healthcare Management. 50:4 July/August 2005.226-236 • “Healthcare’s Horizon- Form Incremental Improvement to Designing for the Future”. Stahl, Richard and Schultz, Bradley and Prexton, Carolyn. Six Sigma Forum Magazine February 2003.17-26. www.ASQ.org • “Lean-Six Sigma – Tools for rapid cycle cost reduction”. Caldwell, Chip. Healthcare Financial Management Association. October 2006. 1-2. www.hfma.org

  26. Reading List • “Factors critical to the success of Six-Sigma quality program in an Australian hospital”. Hilton, Roger and Balla, Margaret and Sohal, Amrik S. Total Quality Management. Vol. 19, No. 9, September 2008. 887-902. • “Engaging Physicians in Lean Six Sigma”. Caldwell, Chip. and Brexler, Jim and Gillem, Tom. Quality Progress. November 2005. 42-46 • “Faster Turnaround Time”. Martocci, Maude, and Pellicone, Angelo. Quality Progress. March 2006: 31-36 (www.asq.org) • “Integrating Six Sigma with Total Quality Management: A Case Example for Measuring Medication Errors”. Revere, Lee and Black, Ken. Journal of Healthcare Management. 48:6 November/December 2003. 377-391 • “What’s Wrong with Six Sigma?”. Goodman, John and Theuerkauf, Jon. Quality Progress. January 2005.37-42 www.ASQ.org • “Application of the Six Sigma concept in clinical laboratories: a review”, Gras, Jeremie M. and Philippe, Marianne. Clin Chem Lab Med. 46:6 2007. 789-796 • “Managing Quality-Integrating the Supply Chain”. Foster, S. Thomas. 4th edition. New York: Prentice Hall, 2010.

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