Six facilities of a national hospital chain located in the Southeast United States teamed up with EmCare® to review recent best practice publications, incorporate individual ideas, implement changes, modify processes and develop a standard best practice recommendation for efficient, quality ED care. The main goal was to satisfy the patient’s primary need in presenting to an ED – the desire to see a physician as soon as possible.
The concepts herein have been proven to work in various size and volume EDs. The following chart outlines the descriptions of the six facilities involved in this effort.
Change Management And Contingency Planning in Transformation of Diagnostic De...Ruby Med Plus
Change Management and Contingency Planning: Case Study of Dental Hospital in implementing new Dental X-ray technology.Application of Kurt Lewin Force field Model. Kurt Lewin's three-stage model (1958) of organizational change,
Change Management And Contingency Planning in Transformation of Diagnostic De...Ruby Med Plus
Change Management and Contingency Planning: Case Study of Dental Hospital in implementing new Dental X-ray technology.Application of Kurt Lewin Force field Model. Kurt Lewin's three-stage model (1958) of organizational change,
Connecting healthcare providers and public health departmentsCureMD
Designed to optimize healthcare outcomes, CureMD intuitively collects standardized data & seamlessly connects it with public health departments for care quality, disease prevention & cost control.
With CureMD, clinicians can easily contribute surveillance data to Public Health Departments without changing workflows or incurring extra work. Our built-in business intelligence consolidates information with intuitive dashboards to make public health management more effective and timely.
Five Practical Steps Towards Healthcare Data GovernanceHealth Catalyst
Health systems increasingly recognize data as one of their top strategic assets, but how many organization have the processes and frameworks in place to protect their data? Without effective data governance, organizations risk losing trust in their data and its value in process and outcomes improvement; a 2018 survey indicated less than half of healthcare CIOs have strong trust in their data.
By following five steps towards data governance, health systems can effectively steward data and grow and maintain trust in it as a critical asset:
Identify the organizational priorities.
Identify the data governance priorities.
Identify and recruit the early adopters.
Identify the scope of the opportunity appropriately.
Enable early adopters to become enterprise data governance leaders and mentors.
Optimize Your Labor Management with Health Catalyst PowerLabor™Health Catalyst
To cut costs, healthcare leaders are looking at their greatest operating expense—labor management. However, with outdated labor management systems, decision makers rely on retrospective, incomplete data to forecast staffing volumes and patient support needs. Limited workforce insight can result in misaligned staffing or worse, jeopardizing patient care due to lack of labor support. With the Health Catalyst PowerLabor™ application, part of the Financial Empowerment Suite™, decision makers have access to a comprehensive view of labor data by organization, department, team, and job role. Timely insight into current and future hospital needs allows leaders to staff to patient volume, control escalating labor expenses, and ensure optimal resources for excellent patient care.
Nottingham University Hospitals deploys state-of-the-art Cisco Cius Mobile Workforce Solution with Nervecentre software to increase operational efficiency and improve patient care.
Power Point Presentation made to a major pharmaceutical manufacturer in 1998. Identifies cause of Medical Crisis and how Pharm mfgrs can use regulations to add value to their contracts with MCOs.
IJRET : International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology is an international peer reviewed, online journal published by eSAT Publishing House for the enhancement of research in various disciplines of Engineering and Technology. The aim and scope of the journal is to provide an academic medium and an important reference for the advancement and dissemination of research results that support high-level learning, teaching and research in the fields of Engineering and Technology. We bring together Scientists, Academician, Field Engineers, Scholars and Students of related fields of Engineering and Technology
Quality Medical Care presentation made to a major Pharm mfgr in 1998 at a national meeting. Purpose is to explain how pharm company could use gov mandates to add value to contracts with MCOs.
How CMOs Can Solve the Next Set of Hospital Challenges - Ian Maynard, Real Ti...marcus evans Network
Ian Maynard of Real Time Medical, a solution provider at the marcus evans National Healthcare CMO/CMIO Summit 2013, on setting up efficient patient diagnostic systems.
Interview with: Ian Maynard, Chief Executive Officer, Real Time Medical
While Lean Sigma is not a silver bullet for driving business performance improvement, it is a key element of a high-performing business ecosystem which provides the ongoing catalyst to drive innovation while also improving business outcomes.
Delivering high value healthcare through lean hospitalsglobalsevensteps
The demand for quality healthcare has never been so important with the recent episode of world wide challenges faced by the human race.
However, most hospitals are far from being humane and still working with outdated models. Demand and supply issues are widening the gap in providing quality healthcare.
Connecting healthcare providers and public health departmentsCureMD
Designed to optimize healthcare outcomes, CureMD intuitively collects standardized data & seamlessly connects it with public health departments for care quality, disease prevention & cost control.
With CureMD, clinicians can easily contribute surveillance data to Public Health Departments without changing workflows or incurring extra work. Our built-in business intelligence consolidates information with intuitive dashboards to make public health management more effective and timely.
Five Practical Steps Towards Healthcare Data GovernanceHealth Catalyst
Health systems increasingly recognize data as one of their top strategic assets, but how many organization have the processes and frameworks in place to protect their data? Without effective data governance, organizations risk losing trust in their data and its value in process and outcomes improvement; a 2018 survey indicated less than half of healthcare CIOs have strong trust in their data.
By following five steps towards data governance, health systems can effectively steward data and grow and maintain trust in it as a critical asset:
Identify the organizational priorities.
Identify the data governance priorities.
Identify and recruit the early adopters.
Identify the scope of the opportunity appropriately.
Enable early adopters to become enterprise data governance leaders and mentors.
Optimize Your Labor Management with Health Catalyst PowerLabor™Health Catalyst
To cut costs, healthcare leaders are looking at their greatest operating expense—labor management. However, with outdated labor management systems, decision makers rely on retrospective, incomplete data to forecast staffing volumes and patient support needs. Limited workforce insight can result in misaligned staffing or worse, jeopardizing patient care due to lack of labor support. With the Health Catalyst PowerLabor™ application, part of the Financial Empowerment Suite™, decision makers have access to a comprehensive view of labor data by organization, department, team, and job role. Timely insight into current and future hospital needs allows leaders to staff to patient volume, control escalating labor expenses, and ensure optimal resources for excellent patient care.
Nottingham University Hospitals deploys state-of-the-art Cisco Cius Mobile Workforce Solution with Nervecentre software to increase operational efficiency and improve patient care.
Power Point Presentation made to a major pharmaceutical manufacturer in 1998. Identifies cause of Medical Crisis and how Pharm mfgrs can use regulations to add value to their contracts with MCOs.
IJRET : International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology is an international peer reviewed, online journal published by eSAT Publishing House for the enhancement of research in various disciplines of Engineering and Technology. The aim and scope of the journal is to provide an academic medium and an important reference for the advancement and dissemination of research results that support high-level learning, teaching and research in the fields of Engineering and Technology. We bring together Scientists, Academician, Field Engineers, Scholars and Students of related fields of Engineering and Technology
Quality Medical Care presentation made to a major Pharm mfgr in 1998 at a national meeting. Purpose is to explain how pharm company could use gov mandates to add value to contracts with MCOs.
How CMOs Can Solve the Next Set of Hospital Challenges - Ian Maynard, Real Ti...marcus evans Network
Ian Maynard of Real Time Medical, a solution provider at the marcus evans National Healthcare CMO/CMIO Summit 2013, on setting up efficient patient diagnostic systems.
Interview with: Ian Maynard, Chief Executive Officer, Real Time Medical
While Lean Sigma is not a silver bullet for driving business performance improvement, it is a key element of a high-performing business ecosystem which provides the ongoing catalyst to drive innovation while also improving business outcomes.
Delivering high value healthcare through lean hospitalsglobalsevensteps
The demand for quality healthcare has never been so important with the recent episode of world wide challenges faced by the human race.
However, most hospitals are far from being humane and still working with outdated models. Demand and supply issues are widening the gap in providing quality healthcare.
Making the shift to value-based care is not easy. However, a growing number of healthcare organizations are finding success leveraging Lean process improvement and health IT to reduce waste, lower costs, and improve quality.
In fact, leading health systems like Bon Secours, Prevea Health, and North Mississippi Medical Center are using these principles to improve care management processes and achieve better patient outcomes.
We have assembled these strategies into a new whitepaper. You will learn:
- How key concepts of Lean thinking can be applied to healthcare
- Why high-performing practices are using Lean to enable care team members to provide better care
- The financial advantages of a team-based, population health management approach in a value-based reimbursement system
The Top Five Insights into Healthcare Operational Outcomes ImprovementHealth Catalyst
Effective, sustainable healthcare transformation rests in the organizational operations that power care delivery. Operations include the administrative, financial, legal, and clinical activities that keep health systems running and caring for patients. With operations so critical to care delivery, forward-thinking organizations continuously strive to improve their operational outcomes. Health systems can follow thought leadership that addresses common industry challenges—including waste reduction, obstacles in process change, limited hospital capacity, and complex project management—to inform their operational improvement strategies.
Five top insights address the following aspects of healthcare operational outcomes improvement:
Quality improvement as a foundational business strategy.
Using improvement science for true change.
Increasing hospital capacity without construction.
Leveraging project management techniques.
Features of highly effective improvement projects.
Scenario A specialty memory chip manufacturer is located in South.docxkenjordan97598
Scenario: A specialty memory chip manufacturer is located in Southern California with manufacturing plants located in the United States, Europe, Singapore, and Japan. Additionally, it has branch sales offices located in major metropolitan areas across the globe. The market for its six key products included original equipment manufacturers of personal computers, cellular telephone manufacturers, electronics distributors, and government organizations. The market environment for its products is extremely volatile with fluctuating demand and rapidly changing prices. The company uses short-term contracts (less than 1 month) and spot pricing for irregular customers. Internally, the operation is capital-intensive with depreciation running approximately $1.2 million per day (depreciation has an impact on revenue streams). The 6 key products had further specialized components, making the possible line mix total 24 distinct products. Further, the manufacturing process required high manufacturing lead times and various product yields. In the high technology memory arena, product life cycles were dramatically shortened because of rapid obsolescence. To coordinate the manufacturing activity, the company has an established process and system that helped optimize resource utilization, improve shop floor efficiencies, and manage customer demand.
The company is experiencing 10–15% growth in revenues and volume, primarily tied to increased worldwide demand, product type, and market variables. Most significantly, the company received a major preorder for a new cellular phone memory chip that is scheduled to come out in 3 months. This preorder is scaled for up to 10 million units, and management is concerned that the existing process and system may not be suitably optimized for this order. Additionally, the forecast in sales figures for all six key product lines is higher than it has been in the past. With the increase in volume, management is concerned about the quality management process as well—can the existing processes maintain the highest degree of quality needed?
As a new member of the production planning management staff, you will be expected to help develop strategies to support the expanded growth plans. Your team faces several fundamental issues. First, are the individual plant layouts conducive to the expanded growth expected by the company? Second, are individual plant layouts optimized for the most efficient performance and lowest cost? Third, is the existing supply chain interaction among all the various components optimized in the same manner individual layouts are expected to be optimized? Finally, your group must consider capacity planning and workflow to ensure the company can meet its contractual obligations with the maximum revenue and profitability. It currently uses information systems developed by the company to conduct production planning. You believe that a fully integrated enterprise resource planning tool or specific production plann.
Check out this introduction to Lean processes in a health care setting—touching on 5 keys to Lean success. This presentation is from a recent AORN webinar, which is available for replay at http://bit.ly/188O2uQ. Get complete Lean instruction and tools for implementation during a workshop in Denver, CO; more information on these August and September events available at http://bit.ly/14B9gLu.
As population health management goes mainstream, providers need robust, integrated software solutions to aggregate and analyze data, coordinate care, engage patients and clinicians, and provide full administrative and financial functionality. Population Health Management is a journey, and the number of approaches to population health are varied.
Similar to Proven Techniques to Boost Lean Implementation in Your Emergency Department (20)
The Future of OB Hospitalist Programs: The Unexpected DeliverablesEmCare
You might expect that with an OB hospitalist onsite 24/7, hospitals are better equipped to manage obstetric and gynecologic care and emergencies, providing the ultimate in patient safety while reducing liability and risk. That’s true. But there are unexpected benefits as well.
Wayne L. Farley, Jr., D.O., FACOG, presents “The Future of OB Hospitalist Programs: The Unexpected Deliverables.” This webinar was September 21, 2016, hosted by Becker’s Hospital Review.
Alexander Strachan, Jr., MD, MBA, and Asim Usman, MD, of EmCare Hospital Medicine, discuss bundled payments for care improvement (BPCI) and how hospitalists are leading the charge.
Originally presented May 4, 2016, as a webinar in partnership with Becker's Hospital Review.
PowerPoint: Practical Approaches to Improving Patient Pre-Op PreparationEmCare
Michael Hicks, MD, MBA, FACHE, CEO of EmCare Anesthesia, and Lisa Kerich, PA-C, VP of Operations for EmCare Anesthesia, provide expert advice for improving the performance of your O.R. through an integrated, collaborative approach. Learn how Pre-Anesthesia Testing (PAT) clinics are being used successfully to improve patient readiness, surgeon satisfaction and financial performance.
Originally presented Sept. 17, 2015, as a webinar in partnership with Becker's Hospital Review.
Hardwiring Hospital-Wide Flow To Drive Competitive PerformanceEmCare
Thom Mayer, MD, FACEP, FAAP and Kirk Jensen, MD, MBA, FACEP, authors of “Hardwiring Flow” and “The Patient Flow Advantage, " share their secrets for streamlining processes, changing behaviors, and achieving sustainable advances in hardwiring flow throughout your hospital system.
This presentation is an abridged version of the webinar that Drs. Jensen and Mayer delivered July 9, 2015, in partnership with Becker's Hospital Review.
How one Hospital Shaved Off 88 Minutes from their ALOSEmCare
With goals of getting the right processes and staffing in place, the administration and staff at LewisGale Medical Center in Salem, Virginia put a priority on patient-centered process improvements that would shorten wait times and length of stay in the emergency department (E.D.). Here’s how they improved metrics including decreasing the ED ALOS by 45 percent.
Efficiency in the emergency department is always at the forefront of the minds of hospital leaders -- and for good reason. The infographic below reveals the true cost of inefficiency in the emergency department when it comes to patients who leave without treatment (LWOT) and why hospitals can't afford to leave this issue unaddressed.
OPERATIONAL INTEGRATION: CREATING A HIGH-PERFORMING HEALTHCARE ORGANIZATIONEmCare
What strategies are in your arsenal to combat and conquer the thorny challenges
of healthcare reform? Reducing costs? Improving quality, productivity and efficiency? Redesigning processes? Improving the patient experience? Transforming your organization from one that delivers episodic sick care to one that nurtures wellness and personal responsibility is daunting, but absolutely necessary. While consultants
have prospered by touting the “solution-of-the-day,” a handful of approaches have gained traction. One of those is clinical integration.
Learn how Methodist Richardson Achieved Fastest Total Patient Treatment Time ...EmCare
Methodist Richardson Medical Center (MRMC) and the Richardson Fire Department (RFD) were recognized by the American Heart Association for having the fastest total combined patient treatment time for cardiac events for the first quarter of 2011 for the state of Texas.
Learn how a shift in processes, leadership and culture to an integrated solution can put your hospital on track to achieve improved clinical outcomes, metrics and patient experiences, each of which can have a potentially dramatic financial impact.
[HOW TO] Create High Performance Emergency DepartmentsEmCare
EmCare’s latest White Paper on implementing a system-wide approach to providing emergency care. At Baylor Health Care System, the initiative has fostered the development of numerous approaches to managing the challenges faced by its emergency departments, including an innovative protocol to manage overcrowding at the system’s flagship facility.
We are all engaged in a hospital-wide a system of
patient flow or patient care. We are each part of the
whole. The emergency department is connected
to the ICU. The ICU is connected to the OR. The
discharge and discharge processes are connected
to our admission capabilities and capacity. It’s
like the “Dry Bones” song you learned as a child,
“The foot bone’s connected to the leg bone, the
leg bone’s connected to the knee bone, the knee
bone’s connected to the thigh bone” and so forth.
Overall flow, or “the system,” can only be improved
by applying several key strategic concepts to these
disparate but equal parts.
Fast and Efficient Practice: The Emergency Department Clinician on the Emerge...EmCare
Patient safety and satisfaction are the focus
within any emergency department. To streamline
navigation on the ED autobahn, i.e., flow, and
thus accomplish these goals most efficiently
can be accomplished by the consideration of
several factors and the application of several
key techniques.
Much has been written in the business literature about managing the waiting experience. Federal Express has noted that “waiting is frustrating, demoralizing, agonizing, aggravating, annoying, time consuming, and incredibly expensive.” We intuitively know this from our own experience as well as from our patients. In this #ACEP13 presentation, Dr. Jensen gives practical tips to improve your patients' ED experience.
This Genesis Cup 2012 runner-up presentation by Medical Director, Harry "Tripp" Wingate, MD and Shayne Middleton, RN, RDCS describes the process used at EMH ED to “flip” the complaint to compliment ratio – a crude measure of customer service performance in a rural ED. The presentation details steps from training on AIDET to the key issues in providing effective feedback to ED staff. Special emphasis is given to the tricky issue of email communication and compliance with HIPAA. New web-based tools (WinZip.com and MyFax.com) for safe email communication are introduced to the audience with comments on benefits and usage.
In 2011, we took it upon ourselves to break down our patient care and examine it from the time the patient arrived (regardless of method) to the time they departed (again, regardless of method). Over the next year, we developed and implemented an end-to-end strategy of patient care and flow, where all decisions were under the scrutiny of what was deemed to be ‘patient-centric’. This process of self-improvement led us to develop a scalable, replicable template for hospitals of all shapes and sizes. Too often, patient flow hurdles and patient care problems are addressed solely through the vantage of individual departments at the expense of efficiency. Our presentation is the result of a personal, real-time experience.
Knee anatomy and clinical tests 2024.pdfvimalpl1234
This includes all relevant anatomy and clinical tests compiled from standard textbooks, Campbell,netter etc..It is comprehensive and best suited for orthopaedicians and orthopaedic residents.
Tom Selleck Health: A Comprehensive Look at the Iconic Actor’s Wellness Journeygreendigital
Tom Selleck, an enduring figure in Hollywood. has captivated audiences for decades with his rugged charm, iconic moustache. and memorable roles in television and film. From his breakout role as Thomas Magnum in Magnum P.I. to his current portrayal of Frank Reagan in Blue Bloods. Selleck's career has spanned over 50 years. But beyond his professional achievements. fans have often been curious about Tom Selleck Health. especially as he has aged in the public eye.
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Introduction
Many have been interested in Tom Selleck health. not only because of his enduring presence on screen but also because of the challenges. and lifestyle choices he has faced and made over the years. This article delves into the various aspects of Tom Selleck health. exploring his fitness regimen, diet, mental health. and the challenges he has encountered as he ages. We'll look at how he maintains his well-being. the health issues he has faced, and his approach to ageing .
Early Life and Career
Childhood and Athletic Beginnings
Tom Selleck was born on January 29, 1945, in Detroit, Michigan, and grew up in Sherman Oaks, California. From an early age, he was involved in sports, particularly basketball. which played a significant role in his physical development. His athletic pursuits continued into college. where he attended the University of Southern California (USC) on a basketball scholarship. This early involvement in sports laid a strong foundation for his physical health and disciplined lifestyle.
Transition to Acting
Selleck's transition from an athlete to an actor came with its physical demands. His first significant role in "Magnum P.I." required him to perform various stunts and maintain a fit appearance. This role, which he played from 1980 to 1988. necessitated a rigorous fitness routine to meet the show's demands. setting the stage for his long-term commitment to health and wellness.
Fitness Regimen
Workout Routine
Tom Selleck health and fitness regimen has evolved. adapting to his changing roles and age. During his "Magnum, P.I." days. Selleck's workouts were intense and focused on building and maintaining muscle mass. His routine included weightlifting, cardiovascular exercises. and specific training for the stunts he performed on the show.
Selleck adjusted his fitness routine as he aged to suit his body's needs. Today, his workouts focus on maintaining flexibility, strength, and cardiovascular health. He incorporates low-impact exercises such as swimming, walking, and light weightlifting. This balanced approach helps him stay fit without putting undue strain on his joints and muscles.
Importance of Flexibility and Mobility
In recent years, Selleck has emphasized the importance of flexibility and mobility in his fitness regimen. Understanding the natural decline in muscle mass and joint flexibility with age. he includes stretching and yoga in his routine. These practices help prevent injuries, improve posture, and maintain mobilit
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The "New Drug Discovery and Development" process involves the identification, design, testing, and manufacturing of novel pharmaceutical compounds with the aim of introducing new and improved treatments for various medical conditions. This comprehensive endeavor encompasses various stages, including target identification, preclinical studies, clinical trials, regulatory approval, and post-market surveillance. It involves multidisciplinary collaboration among scientists, researchers, clinicians, regulatory experts, and pharmaceutical companies to bring innovative therapies to market and address unmet medical needs.
Acute scrotum is a general term referring to an emergency condition affecting the contents or the wall of the scrotum.
There are a number of conditions that present acutely, predominantly with pain and/or swelling
A careful and detailed history and examination, and in some cases, investigations allow differentiation between these diagnoses. A prompt diagnosis is essential as the patient may require urgent surgical intervention
Testicular torsion refers to twisting of the spermatic cord, causing ischaemia of the testicle.
Testicular torsion results from inadequate fixation of the testis to the tunica vaginalis producing ischemia from reduced arterial inflow and venous outflow obstruction.
The prevalence of testicular torsion in adult patients hospitalized with acute scrotal pain is approximately 25 to 50 percent
TEST BANK for Operations Management, 14th Edition by William J. Stevenson, Ve...kevinkariuki227
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Report Back from SGO 2024: What’s the Latest in Cervical Cancer?bkling
Are you curious about what’s new in cervical cancer research or unsure what the findings mean? Join Dr. Emily Ko, a gynecologic oncologist at Penn Medicine, to learn about the latest updates from the Society of Gynecologic Oncology (SGO) 2024 Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer. Dr. Ko will discuss what the research presented at the conference means for you and answer your questions about the new developments.
These lecture slides, by Dr Sidra Arshad, offer a quick overview of physiological basis of a normal electrocardiogram.
Learning objectives:
1. Define an electrocardiogram (ECG) and electrocardiography
2. Describe how dipoles generated by the heart produce the waveforms of the ECG
3. Describe the components of a normal electrocardiogram of a typical bipolar leads (limb II)
4. Differentiate between intervals and segments
5. Enlist some common indications for obtaining an ECG
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 11, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 9, Human Physiology - From Cells to Systems, Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
3. Chapter 29, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
4. Electrocardiogram, StatPearls - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK549803/
5. ECG in Medical Practice by ABM Abdullah, 4th edition
6. ECG Basics, http://www.nataliescasebook.com/tag/e-c-g-basics
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN HEALTHCARE.pdfAnujkumaranit
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Prix Galien International 2024 Forum ProgramLevi Shapiro
June 20, 2024, Prix Galien International and Jerusalem Ethics Forum in ROME. Detailed agenda including panels:
- ADVANCES IN CARDIOLOGY: A NEW PARADIGM IS COMING
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- WHAT’S NEW IN THE TREATMENT OF INFECTIOUS,
ONCOLOGICAL AND INFLAMMATORY SKIN DISEASES?
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Ozempic: Preoperative Management of Patients on GLP-1 Receptor Agonists Saeid Safari
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Proven Techniques to Boost Lean Implementation in Your Emergency Department
1. How to Modify Lean for
Emergency Department Implementation
An EmCare White Paper
Authored by:
Michael Lozano Jr, MD, FACEP
Donna Biehl, RN
Danielle Organ
February 2011
3. Contents
Introduction................................................................................................................ 2
Modified Lean Implementation: An Overview.............................................. 2
Lean Methodologies................................................................................................ 3
Fundamental Concepts to Improving
Any Emergency Department............................................................................... 3
Overcoming Obstacles
Commonly Presented Around Change............................................................ 5
The Importance of Teamwork Among
Nursing and Clinical Providers............................................................................. 6
Keys to Implementing New Processes.............................................................. 7
Measuring Outcomes and Results..................................................................... 8
Summary................................................................................................................... 11
About EmCare®....................................................................................................... 11
Contributor Biographies...................................................................................... 12
Acknowledgments................................................................................................ 13
Contact EmCare...................................................................................................... 14
1
4. Introduction
Six facilities of a national hospital chain located in the Southeast
United States teamed up with EmCare® to review recent best practice
publications, incorporate individual ideas, implement changes, modify
processes and develop a standard best practice recommendation for
efficient, quality ED care. The main goal was to satisfy the patient’s
primary need in presenting to an ED – the desire to see a physician as
soon as possible.
The concepts herein have been proven to work in various size and
volume EDs. The following chart outlines the descriptions of the six
facilities involved in this effort.
Hospital Profiles
ED Bed Size
develops best practice
recommendations for
efficient, quality
emergency care.
1
Physician refers to all medical
practitioners including physician
assistants and advanced practice
nurses who commonly supplement
the physician workforce.
2
217
27
~38,000
302
31
~63,000
235
Hospital Four
modifies processes, and
~27,000
Hospital Three
implements changes,
21
Hospital Two
individual ideas,
Facility Bed Size
Hospital One
EmCare incorporates
ED Volume
18
~28,000
294
Hospital Five
26
~30,000
256
Hospital Six
24
~35,000
290
Modified Lean Implementation: An Overview
As a result of the increasing demand on emergency departments (ED)
to accommodate additional capacity, the six hospitals partnered with
EmCare, Inc., their ED management group, to perform a shared training
and implementation process. Lean and time management principles
were taught to ED staff and medical providers, and best practices were
introduced to both groups. Lean principles were learned, modified
and applied to create an effective model that would satisfy every
department’s individual situation. The strategy was derived from the
traditional five day Kaizan Lean event and modified to fit the culture,
productivity and budgetary needs of an ED. This paper outlines the
important key factors to consider in any ED process modification.
All of the facilities included in this paper have seen significant
improvements in performance metrics. The door-to-physician1 times
and the percentage of patients leaving without being seen by a
physician dropped as much as 67 percent and total patient length
of stay as much as 60 percent. The facilities have also been able to
maintain performance improvement despite volume growths of up to
33 percent.
5. Lean Methodologies
Lean is a process improvement technique designed to identify and
minimize excess steps in a process. Lean participants are taught how
to use techniques such as value stream mapping, 5S, Kaizan events,
Spaghetti Diagrams, etc., to help visualize excess process steps or
“waste.” 2
Lean was first applied in a vehicle manufacturing plant with a goal
of reducing repetitive steps on an assembly line, allowing workers to
produce more goods with less effort. The idea was “fewer man-hours,
less inventory, the highest quality cars with the fewest defects of any
competing manufacturer.” 2
ED versus assembly line
Although Lean principles were designed with a manufacturing setting
in mind, it soon became obvious that Lean techniques could be applied
to virtually every industry, particularly health care, where increased
utilization has created an ongoing need for improved quality and
efficiency.
Lean is a process
improvement technique
designed to identify
and minimize excess
steps in a process.
This need is especially pronounced in emergency departments, which
are continually challenged to perform an increasing number of high
quality services to treat an increasing patient population. As the
demand for high-quality health care by patients, payers and regulators
has continued to surge, EDs continue to look for more efficient
processes to handle increasing demands. One proposed solution is
the adoption of several of the processes and strategies utilized in an
assembly line environment. The challenge has been adapting the
process to the nature of emergency medicine, which involves variability
in arrival census, acuity and level of care.
Fundamental Concepts to Improving
Any Emergency Department
Adapt to the ED culture
The traditional five-day Kaizan Lean event is an all-hands-on-deck
approach to process improvement. Although there are similarities
between this traditional Lean event and the recommended program
explained in this paper, there are some key differences in an ED that
require modification of a traditional Lean program:
2
Liker, 2004. In The Toyota Way.
Madison, WI: CWL Publishing
Enterprises, Inc.
1. An ED is a 24-hour operation, unlike most manufacturing settings.
Every worker in an ED setting cannot be taken off of the floor to
3
6. complete a traditional five-day event. In addition, key decision
makers in the facility cannot focus their attention solely on
the ED for such a time without affecting the rest of the facility.
2. EDs operate with a group of workers with a mixed set of skills
who traditionally work 12-hour shifts. The availability of any
given worker from day to day is not predictable and there is
a greater proportion of part-time workers in an ED than in a
manufacturing setting.
3. Since the ED cannot be shut down, the direct cost of a five-day
Kaizan event would involve the backfill of additional part-time
workers to cover the ED operations. Indirect costs would also
increase if managers were committed to the program for five days.
To develop the most appropriate strategy for an ED setting, the team
reviewed the benefits and costs of shortening the traditional five-day
Kaizan event. To balance the shortened intensive time for education and
design, the team lengthened the implementation time table. In most
cases, total implementation took about two to six months.
Create a patient-centric process
The first fundamental
rule for ED process
improvement is designing
a patient-centric process.
The first fundamental rule for ED process improvement is designing
a patient-centric process. Not only does it follow the Lean approach
of single piece flow, it also meshes with traditional medical teaching
of placing the patient first in all situations. This synergy increases
compliance and acceptance. It also means that the entire process
should be reviewed from the patient’s point of view.
Waiting and walking excessively are the major types of waste from a
patient’s perspective. A patient will have a positive experience if an ED
can effectively:
1. Reduce the time in a waiting room prior to initial medical contact.
2. Organize tasks so that parallel processes predominate over
serial processes.
3. Segment patient cohorts according to acuity, and thus indirectly
according to resource needs.
Reduce unnecessary steps for
the ED staff and medical providers
The second fundamental rule for ED process improvement is to
implement changes that help the ED staff and physicians complete
their jobs more efficiently. A change in everyday process is difficult to
implement without buy-in from the workers. In order to obtain the
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7. necessary buy-in, the front line workers must understand how those
changes benefit them individually. Therefore, you must design a process
that will:
1. Reduce redundancy of tasks.
2. Organize paperwork and data collection so that
it is easier to complete.
3. Stage resources so they are closer to the point of care.
Position the front-line staff to be
the owners of the process design
The next fundamental rule for the effective implementation of ED
process change is to provide autonomy to those who will be actively
making the change happen. To obtain complete buy-in of any process
change, the ED staff and providers must feel that they had a say and
fully agree with the new approach. This is accomplished when:
1. Staff is included in the breakdown and redesign of changes that will
be implemented.
Fear of change is the
hardest obstacle that the
design team of a new
process must overcome.
2. Staff feels that they will receive what they need in order to do a
better job.
3. Staff feels that the goals they were able to set are obtainable.
Overcoming Obstacles
Commonly Presented Around Change
Many people fear change, especially when it involves their work
environment. Change can break up the normal daily routine. It can also
become difficult to come to work every day when you know that the
stable anchor that is your work environment is undergoing change.
Change also adds a level of required thinking that must take place
in order to adapt to the new system. Despite all good intentions,
workers will always find excuses to forestall a process change. Fear of
change is the hardest obstacle that the design team of a new process
must overcome.
Provide adequate training and support
for preparation and the act of changing
Every staff member and provider should be taught how to see the
situation, or current process, from another’s perspective – primarily the
patients’. All too often, ED processes have evolved to a point where they
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8. are primarily worker-centric, not patient-centric. This is a fundamental
mind-set that must be changed.
Staff members that are selected to be a part of the redesign team will
learn the most about Lean concepts, but everyone on the staff will be
affected by the change and must have a working knowledge of why
the change must happen. Most ED workers are goal-directed type-A
personalities who can adapt if the new process is presented in the
proper context.
Through a process of trial and error, we found that the three Lean
techniques that work the best in an ED are:
– Value stream mapping
This technique allows the staff to see, develop their own thoughts,
and provide feedback on why delays occur and how those delays can
create frustration for the patients and care givers. This generates the
will and the insight that allows them to develop a solution that will
reduce frustration during the day.
Sorting, Straightening,
Sweeping, Standardizing
and Sustaining, provides
a continuous improvement opportunity that is
very straightforward and
can be accomplished at
the staff level.
– 5S
This standard Lean technique, which stands for Sorting,
Straightening, Sweeping, Standardizing and Sustaining provides a
continuous improvement opportunity that is very straightforward
and can be accomplished at the staff level. It fosters team building
with a minimum expenditure of resources and little ongoing
supervision from leadership.
– Gemba Walk
Gemba, which is similar to management by walking around, brings
the design team to the place where the value is being created and
invites them to view it from the patient’s perspective. This can be a
powerful experience, especially when non-medical members of the
team can add their viewpoints.
The Importance of Teamwork Among
Nursing and Clinical Providers
Successful ED operation is a team sport. Nurses rely on clinical providers
to make crucial decisions regarding care. Ancillary support departments
need to mesh their operations with the ED’s operation. Emergency
physicians need to interact with their colleagues both
inside and outside the hospital to coordinate care. It is easy to see
why teamwork among all parties is so important for any process
redesign consideration.
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9. The ED nurses and clinical providers make up the crucial combination
of caregivers. ED process improvement cannot take place without these
two teams fully involved and dedicated to working together. It takes
cooperation among both these groups to accomplish the following
high impact process changes:
1. Maximize simultaneous tasks by assessing the patient together.
2. Break down silos by instilling community ownership of the patient
rather than individual ownership.
3. Foster a greater degree of communication and accountability than
traditionally existed.
Keys to Implementing New Processes
In addition to the essential, which is physician-nurse teamwork, a new
process or substantial change to an existing process will never be
successful long-term unless everyone understands and accepts the
need for change. Once a new process is developed by the team, several
steps are necessary for proper implementation.
Provide leadership support
The most important
players for long term
success are the leadership
teams from both the
facility and the physician
management group.
The most important players for long term success are the leadership
teams from both the facility and the physician management
group. They are tasked with ensuring accountability and providing
financial support. The expertise of the workers develops the process
change plan, but it is leadership that is essential for the support in
implementation.
A Lean implementation is the combination of grassroots project
development and C-suite backing. When the workers outside of
the initial development team see that leadership is fully supportive
and engaged with the project, they get the message that change is
inevitable.
Educate the entire staff
Education is challenging because the energy of the creative team
must be harnessed and shared with a relatively uninterested set of
workers. Mandatory, multi-disciplinary classes are effective in educating
the entire staff on the new process flow. A brief introduction to Lean
thinking and a summary of the two-day design event will also prove
helpful. Individual roles and responsibilities and a definite timetable
should be presented and the creative team should address concerns
and allay fears.
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10. Encourage continuous improvement
All staff members and physicians should be encouraged to pursue
continuous improvement of the ED process. This type of thinking
shows that the entire ED staff, including physicians, learned and gained
something from the program education.
It is important to realize that this may lead to changes in the new
process design. If that does occur, no changes should be finalized
without the input of the entire design team. Deviation from this
strategy will leave the staff feeling as if they no longer have a role in
improving their work environment and may potentially identify their
previous design efforts as unsuccessful.
Measuring Outcomes and Results
Success cannot be determined without measurements. To evaluate
what the program has done for your ED, you must document your
baseline metrics and measure ongoing changes.
Success cannot be
determined without
measurements.
Reduced process turnaround time (TAT) means that the ED can better
care for a growing population of patients. Reduced waiting time prior to
initial physician contact leads to better quality of care.
Patient arrival to physician greet
Patient Arrival to Physician Greet (A2G) measures the efficiency and
quality of the patient intake process. Rapid contact with the physician
satisfies the main goal that brought the patient to the facility in the
first place. To the patient, it is a measure of quality of care because it is a
frame of reference that they can relate to.
The following charts outline the results of the modified Lean
implementation in the six facilities.
Patient Arrival to Physician Greet
Implementation
Date
Percent
Improvement
Hospital One
Sept 2007
60%
Hospital Two
Sept 2008
49%
Hospital Three
Nov 2008
-14%
Hospital Four
June 2009
30%
Hospital Five
July 2009
31%
Hospital Six
Nov 2009
54%
Total
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39%
11. Patient Arrival to Patient Leave
Implementation
Date
Percent
Improvement
Hospital One
Sept 2007
26%
Hospital Two
Sept 2008
13%
Hospital Three
Nov 2008
60%
Hospital Four
June 2009
4%
Hospital Five
July 2009
13%
Hospital Six
Nov 2009
12%
Total
16%
Hospital Two successfully reduced A2G times by 49 percent. The facility
participated in a process redesign in September 2008 and immediately
improved its metrics. It has sustained that improvement for one year
while taking care of 14 percent more patients.
Hospital Two
Patient’s total length of stay
Hospital Two sustained
Arrival to Provider
Times Trended
ED Volume
JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC
JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC
improvement for one year
while taking care of 14
percent more patients.
2008
2009
2008
2009
The patient’s total length of stay is a relative measure of the efficiency
of the entire ED stay. Reducing the average length of stay through the
removal of waste and the creation of additional care areas leads to
less patients in the ED at a given time and greater capability to handle
surges of patient arrivals. Although the EDs evaluated had many
opportunities to reduce the length of stay, it is important to note that
for many clinical situations there is a minimum amount of time required
to treat a patient, and further time reductions may result in the decrease
of quality of care.
Hospital Three successfully reduced patient total length of stay by 60
percent over a one year time span. This facility participated in a process
redesign event in November 2008 and has successfully completed
continuous improvements since. It has seen a gradual improvement in
metrics over the subsequent year despite caring for 33 percent more
patients during that year.
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12. Hospital Three
Percent of patients leaving prior to medical screening
Average Length of Stay
JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC
2008
2009
ED Volume
JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC
2008
2009
The situation of a patient presenting to the ED but leaving prior to
being seen by a physician must be avoided for several reasons. From
the clinical perspective, patients who leave overcrowded inefficient
EDs prior to a medical screening exam (LPMSE) have been shown to
be as least as ill or injured as those who chose to stay and wait for
treatment. Furthermore, there are federal and state laws and regulations
which could impose penalties on hospitals if patients are not properly
evaluated for an emergency medical condition. Finally, from a financial
perspective, an LPMSE is the loss of a potential paying customer.
The patient’s total length
measure of the efficiency
Hospital Four successfully reduced the number of patients leaving
without treatment by 67 percent from 2008 to 2009. This facility showed
immediate and sustained improvements following their program
implementation.
of the entire ED stay.
Hospital Four
of stay is a relative
3.0%
2.5%
LPMSE
2.0%
1.5%
1.0%
0.5%
0.0%
JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC
2008
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2009
13. Summary
Lean processes have been shown to improve flow in the industrial
setting. There are similarities between an ED and a manufacturing
setting, but there are also some important differences. Although Lean
can be adapted to improve ED operations, such adaptations need
to take into account operational realities and techniques to change
a relatively inflexible culture. Fundamental challenges that must be
addressed include:
• Adapting to culture
• Creating a patient-centric process
• Identification and reduction of extraneous process steps
• Positioning of front-line staff to be the owners of the new
process design
The major obstacle to change is overcoming the fear of change. To meet
that challenge, it is important to demonstrate the need for change. You
must also provide adequate training and support and have confidence
in your staff-led design team.
The major obstacle to
change is overcoming
the fear of change.
To meet that challenge,
it is important to
demonstrate the
need for change.
Fostering teamwork between nurses and physicians is essential to
project success. Without this key component, the rest of the project
will fail. In addition to this element, recruitment of the entire ED staff
and leadership support is the only way to sustain improvements.
All six facilities included in this project were initially selected due
to their historically poor performance. All demonstrated significant
and sustained improvements in Patient Arrival to Physician Greet,
Turnaround Time and Left Prior to Medical Screening Exam.
About EmCare®
EmCare is the leader in physician servicesTM serving more than 500
hospitals nationwide. Founded nearly 40 years ago, today the
company handles more than 9 million patient encounters annually.
The integrated company consists of four service lines including
emergency medicine, hospital medicine, anesthesiology and radiology/
teleradiology. The company is focused on:
• Delivering high quality clinical care
• Improving performance metrics
• Achieving superior patient and staff satisfaction
• Managing costs
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14. For more information on how EmCare can help your hospital strengthen
its emergency medicine practice, feel free to visit us online at
www.EmCare.com. Following the link “Solutions for Hospitals” will offer
more information on the services EmCare’s other specialty divisions –
Hospital Medicine, Anesthesiology, and Radiology / Teleradiology – can
provide. You may also contact a business development representative
directly at (877) 416-8079.
Contributor Biographies
Michael Lozano Jr., MD, FACEP
EmCare
Regional Executive Vice President, SE Region
Dr. Lozano is the Regional Executive Vice President for EmCare, and
most recently, Medical Director and Chairman of the Department of
Emergency Medicine at Northside Hospital in St. Petersburg, FL. He is
also the Medical Director for Hillsborough County Fire Rescue in Tampa,
as well as Florida Urban Search and Rescue System’s Task Force 3.
Dr. Lozano is a highly skilled professional with 20 years of medical
and leadership experience.
Dr. Lozano holds many positions of distinction including State CoMedical Director for the Florida Chapter of International Trauma Life
Support, and immediate past president of the Florida Association
of EMS Medical Directors. He is a Fellow in the American College of
Emergency Physicians and is a Director for the Florida College of
Emergency Physicians. He has been active in the American College of
Emergency Physicians at both the state and national level.
Dr. Lozano attended Syracuse University. He received his Doctor of
Medicine from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, and completed
residencies in Internal Medicine at NYU-Bellevue Hospital and
Emergency Medicine at the Bronx Municipal Hospital Center where
he served as chief resident. In 1994 he completed a fellowship in
Emergency Medical Services through the Office of the Medical Director
of New York City EMS. He has been practicing emergency medicine in
Florida for the past 15 years.
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15. Donna N. Biehl, RN, BS
EmCare
Vice President of Clinical Services, SE Region
Born and raised in St. Petersburg, Florida, Donna has been in nursing
for 40 years. Like most nurses, her career has taken various paths, from
med-surg to the operating room, before finding her niche in emergency
nursing. As the Nursing Director of an ED for over 15 years, she had an
opportunity to develop clinical pathways and protocols, including an
orientation pathway, and was recognized by JCAHO for best practices.
As VP of Clinical Services, SE region for EmCare, her team interacts
with emergency department clinicians to craft effective, practical and
intellectual ways to bring “systems thinking” into process improvement.
By offering value added resources to clinicians, they can build a better
future for health care.
Danielle J. Organ
HCA
Management Engineer , West Florida Division
Danielle has a Bachelor of Science degree in Industrial and
Management Systems Engineering from the University of South Florida,
and has worked towards improving health care processes for four years.
Her background in data analysis and statistical evaluations has helped
her achievements in using numbers and metrics to make operational
decisions in health care with a goal of improving efficiency for patients
and staff.
Acknowledgements
Editors:
Ron Cunningham
Heather Vines
Steve Schaumburg
Barbara Bogucki
Graphic Design:
Doug Simpler
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