Title: NHS Lincolnshire
1NHS Lincolnshire Provider Development
Academy Module 5 Creating a high productivity
culture performance analysis, benchmarking and
improvement Lucy Hadfield
2Module objectives
- Support provider performance profiling,
measurement, monitoring, review and improvement - Provide a systematic and rigorous framework for
ongoing performance analysis and improvement - Dedicate time during class to related project
team work
3Todays agenda
4Topics covered in todays module are intimately
linked at their core are basic principles of
assessment and improvement
5Irrespective of how you measure it, successfully
managing system productivity is key to the
survival of any organisation
Adapted from Accel-team.com
6Productivity can be measured in three main ways
TOTAL PRODUCTIVITY Incorporates all inputs
required to make product or provide service
1
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY Combines labour and
capital, 2 of most important input factors
2
PARTIAL PRODUCTIVITY Uses only 1 input
factor, commonly direct labour hours
3
Be warned different measures of productivity
result in different perspectives on the same
thing be consistent!
7What are your productivity levers?
8The task for provider units
9In the NHS clinical quality and financial
performance are inseparable
10As an NHS provider unit, a large supporting
framework supports and justifies your
productivity management
Business benefits
Global
Gershon review
UK public sector
Productive time
NHS
Meeting commissioners needs Service
sustainability
Provider units
Note policy context shown on this slide is for
illustrative purposes only and is far from
exhaustive. See www.dh.gov.uk for more information
11All businesses including provider units
benefit from measuring and managing their
productivity
12not least because improving productivity should
have a positive impact on profitability
- Increasing outputs and/or decreasing inputs
increases the amount of surplus to invest in
service development because - This should be a goal of all organisations,
whether for-profit or social enterprises
Profit revenue (outputs) costs (inputs)
13The whole public sector is targeted with
efficiency savings, around one-third of which
must come from the NHS
- Report by Sir Peter Gershon in July 2004
Releasing resources to the front line
independent review of public sector efficiency - Identified efficiency gains of gt 20bn in 2007/08
across public sector - 60 of savings are directly cash releasing
- Set NHS target of 2.7 (6.5bn) in annual
efficiency gains by 2007/08 - 50 to come from back office functions,
procurement, transactional services and 50 from
productive time i.e. increase productivity of
frontline professionals - Frees up resources to invest in front line
services, as increases in NHS investment decline
after 2007 from current above inflation levels - Gershon original public sector targets for 2008
were exceeded by around 4bn - A new round of Gershon efficiency savings will be
a key part of the Treasurys measures in future
years to avoid raising general taxation and to
contain increased levels of public sector
borrowing triggered by the banking crisis and
recession
14And, in turn, half of all NHS efficiency savings
should come from what Gershon calls productive
time initiatives
Adapted from NHS Institute for Innovation and
Improvement (June 2006). Delivering quality and
value. Focus on productivity and efficiency
15The Productive Time Programme identifies nine
areas with greatest potential for productivity
improvement
Source NHS Institute for Innovation and
Improvement (June 2006). Delivering quality and
value. Focus on productivity and efficiency
16Extract from reducing avoidable emergency
admissions
As a whole, the report
- Indicates scale of possible gains
- Suggests areas for benchmarking local performance
and setting targets for improvement and benefits
realisation - Highlights how care quality and value can be
improved by providers and commissioners - Provides links to further support and information
resources
Source NHS Institute for Innovation and
Improvement (June 2006). Delivering quality and
value. Focus on productivity and efficiency
17Commissioners objectives challenge providers to
demonstrate productivity/performance improvements
in multiple ways
Source relevant commissioners objectives
extracted from Department of Health (June 2006).
PCT fitness for purpose programme.
18Improving productivity may also enable you to
overcome downward pricing pressures and upward
cost pressures
19Project team exercise
30mins
20Optimising productivity and performance relies
upon
Fully understanding the system service profiling
Linking performance analysis to the provider
units strategic objectives
Measuring and monitoring the right
performance elements of the system
21Creating a detailed provider/service profile
forces you to question what you really need, and
need to do, to operate successfully
See next slide
22Profiling in a patient-oriented system must
include an understanding of the system from the
customer perspective
23Class discussion
Questions To what extent do your current
provider/service profiles support productivity
and performance improvements? In this context,
what main gaps in your provider/service profiles
need filling?
24Performance analysis
Process
Definition
Goal
An investigation of a systems behaviour using
information gathered as the system operates
To determine which parts of the system need
optimising to improve outputs and meet system
objectives
- First steps in setting up a performance analysis
framework - Identify measures to reflect the organisations
strategic goals - Profile each measure in the measures record
sheet - Work out how you will turn performance
measurement into performance improvement
25Connecting an organisations strategy to its
performance metrics ensures that both achieve
what they are supposed to do
26Profile each performance metric in a measures
record sheet
Source adapted from Warwick Business School, cf.
NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement, CSI
learning programme
27Knowing how you are performing is not enough
this knowledge must be used to drive performance
improvement
Internal expectations Influenced by strategic
goals
Current performance level
Required or desired performance level
Bridge the gap
The market Benchmarking, competition, customers,
stakeholders
28But temper the desire to take immediate action
with the benefits of careful consideration
Performance improvement model
Source adapted from NHS Institute for Innovation
and Improvement, CSI learning programme
29Balanced scorecard
- Move away from purely financial outcomes to a
more balanced portfolio of multiple financial and
non financial measures closely linked to
strategic objectives - Comprised of performance measures that are
- Focused
- Appropriate
- Balanced
- Robust
- Integrated
- Cost effective
30The balanced scorecard quadrants
A Practitioners Guide to the Balanced Scorecard
CIMA (Allan Mackay) 2004 Kaplan Norton (1996a)
31Example quadrant objectives
Suggested measures Kaplan and Norton (1996a)
32Example quadrant objectives
Suggested measures Kaplan and Norton (1996a)
33PCT Provider ServicesPerformance Scorecard
2008/2009
34Top 10 most popular performance measures
A Practitioners Guide to the Balanced Scorecard
CIMA (Allan Mackay) 2004
35Typical key performance measures (HAZ diabetes)
A Practitioners Guide to the Balanced Scorecard
CIMA (Allan Mackay) 2004
36Developing process measures for the recuperation
and rehabilitation of the elderly after
hospitalisation
A Practitioners Guide to the Balanced Scorecard
CIMA (Allan Mackay) 2004
37Networking tea/coffee break
38Project team exercise
45 mins
39Benchmarking supports ongoing improvement through
comparisons with best practice
40Why do it?
?
WHICH ENABLE US TO
TO ANSWER 3 KEY QUESTIONS
- Where are we now?
- Where do we want to get to?
- How do we get there?
Learn from best practices Share experiences
Make a strong case for change Continuously
improve Understand market position Gain a
competitive edge
41Why do it?
AND MAKE STEP CHANGES IN PERFORMANCE
42To justify investment in benchmarking, the
subject of the exercise must be business critical
43Once the subject has been identified, the type of
benchmarking done depends on the objectives of
the exercise and the partner network
Performance/ competitive
Strategic
Process
International
Functional/ generic
External
Internal
44Irrespective of the benchmarking subject, network
or purpose, the same underlying process is used
45Productivity across services
46District nursing skill mix against benchmark
X
- XXX PCT has a total of 84 of FTE of a grade 5 or
above, this compares with 81 for PCT 1 87 for
PCT 2, 88 for PCT 3 and 76 for PCT 4
47District nursing cost per contact against
benchmark
- The cost per contact for XXX PCT is the highest
of the group.
48Core Metrics
49How Key Metrics are Derived
Cost per contact
Service costs / volume of activity
Patient contacts per WTE
Volume of activity / WTE in PCT, team
WTE per 10,000 pop
WTE / (overall pop /10,000)
Spend per 1,000 pop
Service costs / (overall population/1000)
of time spent with patients
(time spent with patient / minutes available in
audit period) x 100
50Selecting an appropriate peer group
51Competitive benchmarking will only yield
meaningful results if it is populated with
meaningful information from competitor analysis
52Turn information into intelligence creating a
competitor array (1 of 2)
Key steps (a) to (e) are illustrated in next
slide
53Step 5 A competitor array
Hypothetical example from the market for PCT
provider services
b
a
c
d
e
a
Key relate to steps to be followed
54Making the shift key success factors
- OHOCOS
- Five components of the secondary care pathway
that could shift - Simple diagnostic tests
- Outpatient appointments
- Day case surgery
- Step down care
- Outpatient follow up
NHS Institute for Innovation Improvement and
the University of Birmingham found good evidence
to support the use of strategies grouped around
seven themes (July 2006)
55Enabling strategies
56Re-engineer business processes
- Fundamental review of the key processes that make
up the business - Strong, fact-based analysis, focussed on factors
critical to the success of the business - Does require investment of time effort
- But can dramatically improve productivity
- Sends out a strong, positive message
- Few negative side-effects
- Can often reduce unit costs by 10-30
- Often seen as very positive
- Lean and Six Sigma approaches popular in the NHS
57Service redesign
58Example 1 cycle time is the key measure.
Compared to the 62 day target, XXXs mean cycle
time is 147 days
- Overall cycle time
- Mean - 147 days
- Shortest - 62 days
Discharge
Discharge
Referral received at hospital
First seen in hospital
Scanned
Date diagnosis given
Treatment
Hysteroscopy
- Referral to 1st seen
- Mean - 32 days
- Shortest - 7 days
- Longest - 115 days
- Scanned to hysteroscopy
- Mean - 36 days
- Shortest - 0 days
- Longest - 158 days
- UPL - 186 days
- Hysteroscopy to diagnosis given
- Mean - 16 days
- Shortest - 9 days
- Longest - 28 days
- UPL - 32 days
- Diagnosis to treatment
- Mean - 36 days
- Shortest - 5 days
- Longest - 96 days
- UPL - 99 days
- 1st seen to scanned
- Mean - 19 days
- Shortest - 0 days
- Longest - 94 days
Cycle time analysis based on patients referred
from 2001-04 UPL upper process limit
59Even without a major redesign the current cycle
time could be reduced to 62 days
Nothing seen advice discharge
Advice discharge
GP refers all PMB via TWW
Bloods, ECG, anaesthetic assessment
Hysteroscopy
- PMB clinic visit 1 scan exam
- If scan gt5mm hysteroscopy assessment
- Decide whether I/P or O/P
Results see consultant, plan further treatment,
refer to xxx, etc
First definitive treatment
Referral received at DGH
Pathology
PMB clinic visit 2 full hysteroscopy list
Scan lt5mm advice discharge
Nothing seen advice discharge
Advice discharge
Wk 1
Wk 5/6
Wk 3/4
Wk 2
Wk 7/8
out-patient
in-patient
60and with further improvements could
theoretically be as short as 21 days
Theoretical cycle time 21 days
Referral received at hospital
First seen in hospital
Scanned
Date diagnosis given
Treatment
Hysteroscopy
Referral to 1st seen Shortest - 7 days when
going via OPD but increases overall cycle time
Scanned to hysteroscopy Shortest - 0 days when
done in PMB clinic
Hysteroscopy to diagnosis given Shortest - 9
days when done as inpatient or in PMB clinic
Diagnosis to treatment Shortest - 5 days when
hysteroscopy done as inpatient and patient
treated at Barnsley
1st seen to scanned Shortest - 0 days when both
done in PMB clinic
Cycle time will be extended if inappropriate to
perform hysteroscopy at first visit
Having revised and standardised the pathway, it
needs to be communicated widely
61Newchurch methodology consists of four key steps
1
2
3
4
Simplify the process
Identify, control and eliminate variation in the
process
Set up feedback systems to measure and control
the process
Manage and refine the process
Successful trusts started to address the task of
reducing waiting times in a systematic way and
persevered with the task Sustaining reductions
in waiting times Kings Fund, January 2005
62IT solutions can address many of the common
resourcing and scheduling issues
A lot of time and effort is expended in making
the system workwhen the system should actually
enable staff to work more effectively
63Module 5 follow-up prioritising productivity
improvements
64Module 5 follow-up prioritising productivity
improvements
65Thank you
66Appendix 1
67Sources of further information
68Appendix 2 Service redesign case study
69Endometrial cancer care pathway review -
objectives
70Key messages and findings
71Over three months, Newchurch and the XXX team
worked together to identify, diagnose and resolve
pathway problems
Our methodology
- Statistical process control
- PMB clinic outcomes
- Demand data
Populate model
Data analysis
Create data model
Process mapping
Questionnaire development
Problem definition
Questionnaire completion
Analyse process maps
Synthesis interpretation
- Face to face interviews with staff
- Cancer mgmt peer review
- Client validation
PMB post-menopausal bleeding
Client activity
Newchurch activity
72endometrial cancer pathway referral to initial
booking
73endometrial cancer pathway scanning to decision
to treat
74Analysis highlights four main and interrelated
areas of the pathway where problems exist
1 Cycle time
Discharge
Discharge
2 Routes into and through the pathway
Referral received at hospital
First seen in hospital
Scanned
Date diagnosis given
Treatment
Hysteroscopy
3 Resource optimisation
4 PMB clinic
These problems are substantiated by anecdotal
and/or quantitative analysis
PMB post-menopausal bleeding
75Problem 1 cycle time is the key measure.
Compared to the 62 day target, XXXs mean cycle
time is 147 days
Cycle time analysis based on patients referred
from 2001-04 UPL upper process limit
76Problem 2 a patients route into the pathway and
where they are first seen affects the time to
first appointment
Average times from GP referral to first
appointment
Where 1st seen
Grading
25 days
2 week wait
PMB clinic
27 days
GP referral
80 days
Urgent
Routine
24 days
8 days
Soon
102 days
GOPD
No grading
GOPD Gynaecology Out-Patient Clinic
77Problems 3 4 scheduling without reference to
patient notes can result in poor scanning
utilisation
PMB clinic outcomes
48 of patients attending PMB clinic had already
been scanned, potentially resulting in 122 lost
scanning slots
24 of patients attending PMB clinic discharged
30 of patients attending PMB clinic referred to
GOPD for follow-up
WL waiting list appt appointment
78First, we suggest that XXX simplifies its
referral process and routes into and through the
pathway
- Use existing process maps to remove
non-value-added steps - Adopt single point of access using two week wait
route - Eliminate route via GOPD
- Helps to meet two week wait targets but is
detrimental to overall cycle time - Resolve capacity issues and route via PMB clinic
- Update GP referral protocol accordingly
46 of all patients were referred via TWW yet 90
of these referrals were first seen in GOPD
24 of patients first seen in PMB clinic but 50
had no referral grading, 20 were routine, 10
urgent and 10 TWW
TWW two week wait
79Then SPC analysis can be used to explain shorter
cycle times
Total cycle time from receipt of referral to
treatment
80Even without a major redesign the current cycle
time could be reduced to 62 days
Nothing seen advice discharge
Advice discharge
GP refers all PMB via TWW
Bloods, ECG, anaesthetic assessment
Hysteroscopy
- PMB clinic visit 1 scan exam
- If scan gt5mm hysteroscopy assessment
- Decide whether I/P or O/P
Results see consultant, plan further treatment,
refer to xxx, etc
First definitive treatment
Referral received at DGH
Pathology
PMB clinic visit 2 full hysteroscopy list
Scan lt5mm advice discharge
Nothing seen advice discharge
Advice discharge
Wk 1
Wk 5/6
Wk 3/4
Wk 2
Wk 7/8
out-patient
in-patient
81and with further improvements could
theoretically be as short as 21 days
Theoretical cycle time 21 days
Referral received at hospital
First seen in hospital
Scanned
Date diagnosis given
Treatment
Hysteroscopy
Referral to 1st seen Shortest - 7 days when
going via OPD but increases overall cycle time
Scanned to hysteroscopy Shortest - 0 days when
done in PMB clinic
Hysteroscopy to diagnosis given Shortest - 9
days when done as inpatient or in PMB clinic
Diagnosis to treatment Shortest - 5 days when
hysteroscopy done as inpatient and patient
treated at Barnsley
1st seen to scanned Shortest - 0 days when both
done in PMB clinic
Cycle time will be extended if inappropriate to
perform hysteroscopy at first visit
Having revised and standardised the pathway, it
needs to be communicated widely