Title: Lean Healthcare
1Presented by Melanie Sudduth Director of Lean
Healthcare South Carolina msudduth_at_scmep.org 864-3
54-4773
2Why Are We Here Today?
- Provide a brief introduction to SCMEP
- Provide an overview of Lean Healthcare
- Spotlighting
- - Lean An Overview of the Tools
- - reVIEW Program
- - TWI
3Who is SCMEP
- An independent, non-profit 501c3 organization
with its own charter and board of directors made
up of SC manufacturing company owners and senior
executives, as well as representatives from the
state technical college system, research
universities and Department of Commerce. - Mission - To Strengthen the Global
Competitiveness of South Carolina Businesses - Vision - To be a primary resource for the South
Carolina business community in providing
highly-valued technological, workforce, and
business solutions that improve competitiveness
4Services for Business
- Executive Leadership Services (Strategic
Planning, MA, Business Valuations, Succession
Planning Exit Strategies, etc.) - Top Line Growth (Marketing, Sales, Eureka Winning
Ways and Lean Product Development) - Productivity/Process Improvements (Lean, TOC,
Engineering Design, etc.) - Quality System Implementation (6 Sigma, ISO, QS/
TS Automotive, AS Aerospace standards) - ISO 14001, Energy Assessments
- Environmental, Health Safety Assistance
- Human Resource Solutions
5SCMEP Impacts for 2008
- Companies Served 1,823
- Investment 36.3 MM
- New and Retained Sales 152 MM
- Cost Savings 49.9 MM
- Jobs Created/Retained 1,360
- Overall Economic Impact 254.8 MM
6Defining Lean
- Lean is
- A systematic approach to identifying and
eliminating waste (non-value added activities)
through continuous improvement by flowing the
product or service at the pull of the customer in
pursuit of perfection. - The MEP Lean Network
7Definition of Value-Added
- Value-Added
- Any activity that increases the market form or
function of the product or service. (These are
things the customer is willing to pay for.)
- Non-Value-Added
- Any activity that does not add market form or
function or is not necessary. (These activities
should be eliminated, simplified, reduced, or
integrated.)
8Lean Eliminating NVA
Value-Added
- Non-Value-Added (Muda)
- Overproduction
- Waiting
- Confusion
- Processing
- Inventory
- Defects
- Motion/Travel
Typically gt60 of the total lead time is
non-value-added.
9Overproduction
- Producing more than is required by the next
process - Producing earlier than is required by the next
process - Producing faster than is required by the next
process - Examples of overproduction
- Duplicate charting
- Multiple forms with the same information
- Copies of reports sent automatically
10Inventory Waste
- Any supply or purchase in excess of the current
demand - Examples of excess inventory
- Overstocked medications on units
- Purchasing excess because the piece price is
cheaper - Stocking too much at point of use (large cabinet
fill it up!) - Disorganization cant find it, so we buy more
11Defects/Errors
- Inspection and correction of mistakes
- Examples of Defects/Errors
- Wrong dosage/wrong medication administered
- Rework of any kind
- Inconclusive tests
- Incorrect charges/billing
- Surgical errors
12Processing Waste
- Effort that adds no value from the
patient/customers perspective - Examples of processing waste
- True requirements not clearly defined
Clarifying orders - Extra copies or excessive information
- Missing medications
- Regulatory paperwork
13Waiting Waste
- Idle time created when people, information,
equipment or materials are not at hand. - Examples of waiting waste
- Waiting on test results
- Waiting on doctor/nurse, etc.
- Waiting on availability of equipment or treatment
rooms - Waiting on cleaning of rooms
- Waiting for now medications
- Waiting on supplies
14Confusion
- People doing the work are confused or not sure
about what should be done. - Examples of confusion
- Unclear MD orders
- Unclear route for medicine administration
- Unclear system for indicating charges for billing
- Same activities being performed different ways
different people
15Motion/Travel Waste
- Any movement of people, equipment, supplies, etc.
that does not add value. - Examples of motion waste
- Looking for information, supplies, people, etc.
- Supplies not located at point of use
- Unfavorable layout
- Supplies not prepped prior to patient treatment
16Lean Building Blocks
Continuous Improvement
Cellular/Flow
Pull/Kanban
TPM
Quick Changeover
Quality at Source
POUS
Standardized Work
Batch Reduction
Teams
Value Stream Mapping
5S System
Visual
Facility Layout
17Standardized Work
- All work is safely conducted with all tasks
organized in the best known sequence, and using
the most effective combination of these
resources - People
- Materials
- Methods
- Equipment
185S Workplace Organization Standardization
5S Sort Set in Order Shine Standardiz
e Sustain
A safe, clean, neat arrangement of the workplace
provides a specific location for everything, and
eliminates anything not required.
19Visual Controls
- Simple signals that provide an immediate
understanding of a situation or condition. They
are efficient, self-regulating, and
worker-managed. - Examples
- Kanban cards
- Color-coded forms, supplies, etc.
- Lines on the floor to direct visitors to correct
departments - Lines on the floor to instruct staff where to
return carts, equipment, gurneys, etc. - Andon lights outside patient rooms (signals)
20Facility Layout
21Teams
- Teams Cross-trained and multi-skilled personnel
- Teams for Continuous Improvement
- Process quality, not inspection
- Decision-making done by those doing the work
- Problem solving teams
22Setup or Changeover Reduction
- Definition The time required from the completion
of the last procedure until the start of the next
procedure. Set-up includes getting instruments,
getting supplies, setting-up rooms, getting
materials, and getting paperwork. - Benefits include
- Improvement of capacity and volume
- Increase in flexibility
- Increase in competitiveness
- Increase in Patient Satisfaction
- Increase in Physician Satisfaction
23Impact of Batch Size Reduction
Batch and Queue Processing
Process C
Process A
Process B
10 min.
10 min.
10 min.
30 min. for total order, 21 min. for first piece
Continuous Flow Processing
Process B
Process A
Process C
12 min. for total order, 3 min. for first part
24Point Of Use Storage (POUS)
- Materials, Supplies and Equipment is where used
- Benefits
- Reduced Motion/Travel
- Decreases patient delays
- Increases patient throughput
- Reduces confusion and searching
25Quality at the Source
- Personnel must be certain that work is being
performed correctly - Techniques used
- Samples or visual standards
- Process documentation defining quality
requirements - Poka Yoke Mistake Proofing Techniques
- Root Cause Analysis Tools (A3 Problem Solving)
26Push versus Pull Systems
- In a pull system of service, the timely
transition of work from one step in the process
to another is the primary responsibility of the
downstream (i.e., subsequent) process
27Cellular Flow
- Linking of processes into the most efficient
combination to maximize value-added content while
minimizing waste.
28Total Productive Maintenance (TPM)
- Systematic approach to the elimination of the six
major equipment losses - Setup and adjustment
- Breakdowns
- Idling and minor stoppages
- Reduced speed
- Startup
- Defects and rework
29Conclusion
- Lean
- Simple and visual
- Patient driven
- Supplies as needed
- Reduce non-value-added
- Minimal lead time
- Quality Controls
- Value stream managers
- Traditional
- Complex
- Internally driven
- Excessive supplies
- Speed up value-added work
- Long lead time
- Rework Errors
- Functional departments
30Thank You.