lean tenets and principles -...

19
Lean Tenets and Principles Erika Sundrud, M.A. AVP, QHR Consulting Services Quality, Safety, & Performance Improvement Master Black Belt in Lean Six Sigma 2 Objectives Give examples of measureable improvement goals Evaluate the environment according to the key principles of Lean Describe the key concepts of performance improvement

Upload: truongduong

Post on 02-Apr-2018

217 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Lean Tenets and PrinciplesErika Sundrud, M.A.AVP, QHR Consulting ServicesQuality, Safety, & Performance ImprovementMaster Black Belt in Lean Six Sigma

2

Objectives

Give examples of measureable

improvement goals

Evaluate the environment according to the key principles of Lean

Describe the key concepts of performance

improvement

3

Institute of Medicine, Crossing the Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century, published in 2001

AIM 1 Care should be SAFE

Patients should not be harmed by the care that is intended to help them.

AIM 2 Care should be EFFECTIVE

Providing services based on scientific knowledge to all who could benefit and refraining from providing

services to those not likely to benefit.

AIM 3 Care should be PATIENT-CENTERED

Respectful of and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values and ensuring that

patient values guide all clinical decisions.

AIM 4 Care should be TIMELY

Reducing waits and sometimes harmful delays for both those who receive care and those who give care.

AIM 5 Care should be EFFICIENT

Avoiding waste, including waste of equipment, supplies, ideas and energy

AIM 6 Care should be EQUITABLE

Care that does not vary in quality because of personal characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, geographic

location, and socio-economic status

Also known as the Six Dimensions of Quality

Six Measurable Improvement Aims

4

Quality Assurance

Conform to standards

Relies on inspection

Focus on items

Quality is separate function

Departmental function

Quality Improvement

Improved performance

Monitor over time

System orientation

Quality integrated in organization

Interdisciplinary function

QA vs. QI

5

A hospital is a system

Variation exists

Improvement is possible when decisions are based on analysis of data over time

Three Key Concepts of Performance Improvement

6

The First Law of Improvement

Every system is perfectly designed to achieve exactly the

results it gets.

7Institute for Healthcare Improvement

“Changing the people, or pushing them to “try harder” or “do better” will not result in improved performance.

If we want a new level of performance, we must get a new system.”

8

What is Lean?

“The endless transformation of waste into value from the customer’s perspective.”

It is a System Thinking Concept.

9

Two Tenets of Lean

1. Continuous Improvement

2. Respect for People

10Adapted from James Womack, Juran Institute

Key Principles of Lean Thinking

Identify & eliminate anything that does not add customer value (eliminate waste)

Promote flow – eliminate batching and variation

Focus on processes that deliver customer value

All activities (within the Value Stream) are categorized as adding value or creating waste

11

ValueSpecify Value in the Eyes of the Customer

Defining Value

Value Added vs. Non-Value Added Activities

Waste

12

Voice of the Customer

Needs and Wants of customer?

What is considered VALUE in their eyes?

What are their expectations?

13

Value Added or Non‐Value Added

The Value-Added test Does the task contribute to meeting customer

needs?

Is the customer willing to pay for the task?

Does the task transform the product/service?

Does the customer want or need the transformation?

Is the task done right the first time?

If you answer ‘No’ to any of the questions

is the task value-added?

Over-production

Waiting

Transportation

ProcessingInventory

Motion

Defects

Identifying Waste

15

Value StreamIdentify the Value Stream

Value Streams

Value Stream Mapping

16

Value Streams

The value stream is the entire set of activities that encompasses the transformation of a patient or product from beginning to end.

A value stream map is a visual tool to help see and understand the flow of a process, information, and material.

17

Are ideally from the perspective of the customer.

Can focus on macro- or micro- functions of a process.

Maps all actions currently required to deliver a product or service.

Requires direct observation of the work unit.

Shows waste across departmental boundaries.

The point is to understand the flow of information and material and then use that knowledge to improve your business.

Value Streams Value Stream Mapping

18

WHAT ARE YOUR

VALUE STREAMS?

19

FlowMake Value Flow Continuously without Interruptions

Defining Flow

Creating Flow

20

Flow

Flows of Medicine and Time

o Flow of patients

o Flow of providers

o Flow of family and relationships

o Flow of process engineering

o Flow of supplies

o Flow of equipment

o Flow of information

o Flow of medications

21

Flow

In order to accurately capture the flows:

You must see the flows with your eyes today

You cannot rely on what you’ve heard or seen in the past

Penny Game

22

PullLet Customers Pull the Value

Push Systems

Pull Systems

23

Push Systems

Push System:

Each process step (work station) tries to maximize its production rate and passes output onto the next process step (work station) regardless if it’s needed or not

24

Push Systems

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HnbNcQlzV-4

25

Pull Systems

Pull System:

Pace of operation is set to customer demand. Each process step (work station) produces output only when the next station signals need.

26

Continuous Flow

Quantity

T i m e

Develop Plan for this

Design Normal Process to meet this

Customer Demand

Average Demand

27

PerfectionContinuously improve in the pursuit of perfection through elimination of waste

Kaizen Philosophy

Continuous Improvement

Sustainment

Lean Culture

28

Kaizen Philosophy

Don’t let ideal state get in the way of better

0%

50%

100%

% Im

prov

emen

t

Time (or Cost)

50% improvement

today is good!

29

Sustainment

Statistical Process Control

Standard Work – Documented Process

Process Control Plan

Audit Process

Mistake Proofing

Lean Boards Impr

ovem

ent

Time

Without Sustainment

30

Traditional vs. Lean Culture

Traditional Lean

Functional Silos Interdisciplinary teams

Managers direct Managers teach/enable

Benchmark to justify not improving; “just as good”

Seek the ultimate performance, the absence of waste

Blame people Root cause analysis

Rewards: individual Rewards: group sharing

Supplier is enemy Supplier is ally

Guard information Share information

Volume lowers cost Removing waste lowers cost

Internal focus Customer focus

Expert drives Process driven

31

Why Lean?

Staff engagement

“Nothing about me without me”

Identify waste

Learn to see

Innovation

Target state

32Source: Virginia Mason Medical Center, published by IHI

Impact of Lean in Healthcare

33

Reduce waiting time to see a physician

Increase patient satisfaction

More timely medical interventions

Reduce number of walk-outs

Increase bed availability by reducing LOS

Increase staff time available to treat patients

Use Lean to create value for the patient

Achieving Results

34

Lean Guiding Principles for Achieving Results

Put sacred cows out to pasture!

Don’t assume

Question habits

for a better way

Impossibilities often aren’t

35

Guiding Principles for Achieving Results

Lean Thinking

Key Principles

• Focus on processes that deliver value

• Identify & eliminate anything that does not add value (waste)

What Lean Is Not About…

• Making people work harder

• Short-cutting value-added processes

• Cutting staff!

36

Lean Thinking Key Principles

Categorize all activities as adding value or creating waste

Focus on processes that deliver value to the customer

Identify & eliminate anything that does not add customer value (eliminate waste)

Promote flow - eliminate batching and variation

Lean work environments are pleasing!

37

What is the Secret to a Successful ‘Lean’ Hospital?

Make Lean thinking the way every single person in your current and future hospital behaves

Measure every single strategy, policy, business plan, job description and individual task accordingly

If it’s not Lean, than don’t do it

Meetings, meetings, meetings

o Daily bed management meetings are necessary only because of poor bed management

38

Summary of Key Points

Lean is a systems thinking approach that incorporates and extends elements of performance improvement

Lean principles work effectively in hospital environments to create a more efficient and productive work flow