Article Type
Changed
Wed, 02/15/2017 - 11:30
Display Headline
What do making airbags and delivering health care have in common? (Continuous Improvement, Part 1)

I joined fellow senior leaders from University of Utah Health Care to spend the day at Autoliv in Ogden, Utah, for a field trip. For those unaware, Autoliv is a world leader in saving lives in the automobile industry – 25,000+ lives saved every year via Autoliv’s safety equipment (equipment like airbags and seatbelts), the company says.

This responsibility to their customers (everyday drivers like you and me) is one that Autoliv employees seem to take very seriously and one that focuses them on an amazing culture of continuous improvement. Autoliv fosters this culture via the motto that leaders are teachers who work relentlessly to teach their employees and not judge them, who remove barriers that hinder success in achieving high quality, who reward the front-line reporting of safety hazards (product defects), who promote a data-driven management system, who design the work-space layout to fuel efficiency, and who harness the knowledge and innovative spirit of their workforce to be ever better.

At Autoliv, visual cues are abundant – capitalizing on the fact that people are visual creatures who use visual signals (think traffic lights and fuel indicator gauges) to be efficient and safe in our daily lives. Real-time performance data are everywhere, guiding management response to immediately address safety or efficiency concerns. For example, one can look across the shop floor to see the worker cell with the big red X where there is a problem that management needs to immediately address and one with a yellow triangle where production is slow but the problem is being addressed.

This remarkable management system is called the Autoliv Production System and is Autoliv’s application of Lean principles (Lean is the Americanized version of the Toyota production system), philosophy, and culture. Autoliv is so advanced in its application of Lean that people and companies from around the world come to learn from it.

Effective leadership, customer focus, saving lives, quality, safety, efficiency, mistake proofing – these attributes sound a lot like the necessary goals of our health care system in need. Indeed, there is much for health care to learn (and much to apply!) from companies like Autoliv that have mastered the art of continuous improvement and the relentless pursuit to be ever better. Those who say, "Yes, but they make widgets and we care for people," have not opened their mind up to the possibilities of how to reinvent process-engineering methods –Lean, Six Sigma, PDSA (plan-do-study-act) – into the health care vernacular.

For example, one of our hospitalists has re-engineered how we (all the hospitalists in our group) round with our team to provide consistent and exceptional value to our patients. As part of this process, who is at bedside rounds and each individual’s role in the rounding process are predefined, communication strategies are integrated, and the use of a checklist is religiously followed with the use of a visual reminder and a pocket card. Outcomes are tracked and made transparent, including effectiveness of pain management, unnecessary use of laboratory resources, Foley catheter use and associated infection rates, and medication errors. These data are then assessed by the team monthly with the goal of continuing to improve the process. The results of this process of continuous improvement using Lean principles? Better care at lower costs.

At a system level, early adopters in health care like ThedaCare in Wisconsin and the Virginia Mason Institute in Seattle have done just that. Yet, what was abundantly clear from visiting Autoliv is that, if you take one company’s continuous improvement system and try to apply it to your own, you will fail. Every organization has a unique starting point, unique strengths/weaknesses/opportunities, and a unique culture in which the philosophies, principles, and application of continuous improvement methodology must be reinvented locally – a remarkable opportunity for innovation!

At University of Utah Health Care, we were inspired by Autoliv and energized by the opportunity to reinvent Lean into our own local vernacular and culture. As a U.S. health care system, we need to be committed to this remarkable and necessary journey of ever better and the pursuit of perfection. Our patients deserve this, and the survival of our nation’s health care system depends on it.

As part of the next Systemness blog, I will explore why clinicians must take the lead in continuous improvement and what methods to consider. In the meantime, where are you and your organization in the journey to be ever better?

Dr. Pendleton is chief medical quality officer at University of Utah Health Care in Salt Lake City. He reports having no financial conflicts of interest. Find him on Twitter @MDBobP.

Author and Disclosure Information

 

 

Publications
Legacy Keywords
Systemness, Dr. Robert Pendleton
Sections
Author and Disclosure Information

 

 

Author and Disclosure Information

 

 

I joined fellow senior leaders from University of Utah Health Care to spend the day at Autoliv in Ogden, Utah, for a field trip. For those unaware, Autoliv is a world leader in saving lives in the automobile industry – 25,000+ lives saved every year via Autoliv’s safety equipment (equipment like airbags and seatbelts), the company says.

This responsibility to their customers (everyday drivers like you and me) is one that Autoliv employees seem to take very seriously and one that focuses them on an amazing culture of continuous improvement. Autoliv fosters this culture via the motto that leaders are teachers who work relentlessly to teach their employees and not judge them, who remove barriers that hinder success in achieving high quality, who reward the front-line reporting of safety hazards (product defects), who promote a data-driven management system, who design the work-space layout to fuel efficiency, and who harness the knowledge and innovative spirit of their workforce to be ever better.

At Autoliv, visual cues are abundant – capitalizing on the fact that people are visual creatures who use visual signals (think traffic lights and fuel indicator gauges) to be efficient and safe in our daily lives. Real-time performance data are everywhere, guiding management response to immediately address safety or efficiency concerns. For example, one can look across the shop floor to see the worker cell with the big red X where there is a problem that management needs to immediately address and one with a yellow triangle where production is slow but the problem is being addressed.

This remarkable management system is called the Autoliv Production System and is Autoliv’s application of Lean principles (Lean is the Americanized version of the Toyota production system), philosophy, and culture. Autoliv is so advanced in its application of Lean that people and companies from around the world come to learn from it.

Effective leadership, customer focus, saving lives, quality, safety, efficiency, mistake proofing – these attributes sound a lot like the necessary goals of our health care system in need. Indeed, there is much for health care to learn (and much to apply!) from companies like Autoliv that have mastered the art of continuous improvement and the relentless pursuit to be ever better. Those who say, "Yes, but they make widgets and we care for people," have not opened their mind up to the possibilities of how to reinvent process-engineering methods –Lean, Six Sigma, PDSA (plan-do-study-act) – into the health care vernacular.

For example, one of our hospitalists has re-engineered how we (all the hospitalists in our group) round with our team to provide consistent and exceptional value to our patients. As part of this process, who is at bedside rounds and each individual’s role in the rounding process are predefined, communication strategies are integrated, and the use of a checklist is religiously followed with the use of a visual reminder and a pocket card. Outcomes are tracked and made transparent, including effectiveness of pain management, unnecessary use of laboratory resources, Foley catheter use and associated infection rates, and medication errors. These data are then assessed by the team monthly with the goal of continuing to improve the process. The results of this process of continuous improvement using Lean principles? Better care at lower costs.

At a system level, early adopters in health care like ThedaCare in Wisconsin and the Virginia Mason Institute in Seattle have done just that. Yet, what was abundantly clear from visiting Autoliv is that, if you take one company’s continuous improvement system and try to apply it to your own, you will fail. Every organization has a unique starting point, unique strengths/weaknesses/opportunities, and a unique culture in which the philosophies, principles, and application of continuous improvement methodology must be reinvented locally – a remarkable opportunity for innovation!

At University of Utah Health Care, we were inspired by Autoliv and energized by the opportunity to reinvent Lean into our own local vernacular and culture. As a U.S. health care system, we need to be committed to this remarkable and necessary journey of ever better and the pursuit of perfection. Our patients deserve this, and the survival of our nation’s health care system depends on it.

As part of the next Systemness blog, I will explore why clinicians must take the lead in continuous improvement and what methods to consider. In the meantime, where are you and your organization in the journey to be ever better?

Dr. Pendleton is chief medical quality officer at University of Utah Health Care in Salt Lake City. He reports having no financial conflicts of interest. Find him on Twitter @MDBobP.

I joined fellow senior leaders from University of Utah Health Care to spend the day at Autoliv in Ogden, Utah, for a field trip. For those unaware, Autoliv is a world leader in saving lives in the automobile industry – 25,000+ lives saved every year via Autoliv’s safety equipment (equipment like airbags and seatbelts), the company says.

This responsibility to their customers (everyday drivers like you and me) is one that Autoliv employees seem to take very seriously and one that focuses them on an amazing culture of continuous improvement. Autoliv fosters this culture via the motto that leaders are teachers who work relentlessly to teach their employees and not judge them, who remove barriers that hinder success in achieving high quality, who reward the front-line reporting of safety hazards (product defects), who promote a data-driven management system, who design the work-space layout to fuel efficiency, and who harness the knowledge and innovative spirit of their workforce to be ever better.

At Autoliv, visual cues are abundant – capitalizing on the fact that people are visual creatures who use visual signals (think traffic lights and fuel indicator gauges) to be efficient and safe in our daily lives. Real-time performance data are everywhere, guiding management response to immediately address safety or efficiency concerns. For example, one can look across the shop floor to see the worker cell with the big red X where there is a problem that management needs to immediately address and one with a yellow triangle where production is slow but the problem is being addressed.

This remarkable management system is called the Autoliv Production System and is Autoliv’s application of Lean principles (Lean is the Americanized version of the Toyota production system), philosophy, and culture. Autoliv is so advanced in its application of Lean that people and companies from around the world come to learn from it.

Effective leadership, customer focus, saving lives, quality, safety, efficiency, mistake proofing – these attributes sound a lot like the necessary goals of our health care system in need. Indeed, there is much for health care to learn (and much to apply!) from companies like Autoliv that have mastered the art of continuous improvement and the relentless pursuit to be ever better. Those who say, "Yes, but they make widgets and we care for people," have not opened their mind up to the possibilities of how to reinvent process-engineering methods –Lean, Six Sigma, PDSA (plan-do-study-act) – into the health care vernacular.

For example, one of our hospitalists has re-engineered how we (all the hospitalists in our group) round with our team to provide consistent and exceptional value to our patients. As part of this process, who is at bedside rounds and each individual’s role in the rounding process are predefined, communication strategies are integrated, and the use of a checklist is religiously followed with the use of a visual reminder and a pocket card. Outcomes are tracked and made transparent, including effectiveness of pain management, unnecessary use of laboratory resources, Foley catheter use and associated infection rates, and medication errors. These data are then assessed by the team monthly with the goal of continuing to improve the process. The results of this process of continuous improvement using Lean principles? Better care at lower costs.

At a system level, early adopters in health care like ThedaCare in Wisconsin and the Virginia Mason Institute in Seattle have done just that. Yet, what was abundantly clear from visiting Autoliv is that, if you take one company’s continuous improvement system and try to apply it to your own, you will fail. Every organization has a unique starting point, unique strengths/weaknesses/opportunities, and a unique culture in which the philosophies, principles, and application of continuous improvement methodology must be reinvented locally – a remarkable opportunity for innovation!

At University of Utah Health Care, we were inspired by Autoliv and energized by the opportunity to reinvent Lean into our own local vernacular and culture. As a U.S. health care system, we need to be committed to this remarkable and necessary journey of ever better and the pursuit of perfection. Our patients deserve this, and the survival of our nation’s health care system depends on it.

As part of the next Systemness blog, I will explore why clinicians must take the lead in continuous improvement and what methods to consider. In the meantime, where are you and your organization in the journey to be ever better?

Dr. Pendleton is chief medical quality officer at University of Utah Health Care in Salt Lake City. He reports having no financial conflicts of interest. Find him on Twitter @MDBobP.

Publications
Publications
Article Type
Display Headline
What do making airbags and delivering health care have in common? (Continuous Improvement, Part 1)
Display Headline
What do making airbags and delivering health care have in common? (Continuous Improvement, Part 1)
Legacy Keywords
Systemness, Dr. Robert Pendleton
Legacy Keywords
Systemness, Dr. Robert Pendleton
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME