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Six Sigma In Healthcare

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Healthcare By Trevor Coons Brigham Young University Marriott Business School The case for All or Nothing: Too many companies trying to implement Six Sigma get ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Six Sigma In Healthcare


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 s is a character used in statistics to
    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 shouldnt
    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, well
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 RNs 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 whats 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 youd 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 Surgeons 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. 504 July/August
    2005.226-236
  • Healthcares 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. 486
    November/December 2003. 377-391
  • Whats 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. 466 2007.
    789-796
  • Managing Quality-Integrating the Supply Chain.
    Foster, S. Thomas. 4th edition. New York
    Prentice Hall, 2010.
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