As
promised in my last blog posting, I’m going to start a series of postings on
continuous improvement in the healthcare field.
I’m also going to be sharing excerpts from a remarkable new book
entitled, Performance Improvement for
Healthcare – Leading Change with Lean, Six Sigma and Constraints Management
written by Bahadir Inozu, PH. D., Dan Chauncey, Vickie Kamataris and Charles
Mount. These four authors have combined
their writing talents, knowledge and experience base to create what I’m
convinced with become a classic. I hope
you like this series and even more, I hope you will seek out this book and
share all it has to offer. I think the best way to begin this series of posting
is to share some quotes directly from the opening chapter of this book.
“Even though we are at the forefront of the
most advanced ability to heal, a great many people are deprived of the best of
care either because they cannot afford it or because they are otherwise denied
access to treatment. This book is not about the social aspects of that state
but about what every healthcare leader and his or her organization can do to
make healthcare more available, more affordable, with better outcomes . . . and
yes, if desired, more profitable.”
“The United States
spends more on healthcare than any other nation in the world, yet 50.7 million
people in the United States have no health coverage. In 2008, $7,681 was spent
for every U.S. resident on healthcare, some $2.3 trillion, as reported by the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, yet the average life expectancy in
the United States is shorter than that in many developed and developing
nations. In a study of the healthcare systems of seven industrialized
countries, the Commonwealth Fund ranked the U.S. healthcare system as the most
costly, spending almost twice as much per capita than
average. How can this be?”
“The healthcare
system in the United States is in shambles. Emergency departments are
overflowing with the uninsured. There is a shortage of primary care providers
driven by lifestyle and reimbursement pressures and a rush to specialize. The
Affordable Care Act could extend health insurance coverage to 32 million
uninsured U.S. citizens. There are fears
that there won’t be enough doctors to treat the newly insured because the
United States could face a deficit of as many as 150,000 doctors in the next 15
years, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges. Like doctors,
nurses have been working more overtime and take care of more and more patients,
leading to the exit of experienced nurses from the profession because of
burnout and exhaustion. Forty percent of practicing nurses are 50 years old or
older. In the journal Health Affairs, Rother and Lavizzo-Mourey project
that within the next 15 years, the U.S. nursing shortage will reach a shortfall
of 260,000 registered nurses. Dedicated physicians and nurses are already
working against impossible odds to achieve improbable results. How will care be
provided to this expanding population of patients? The answer is not by working harder.”
“The United States
has more modern hospitals, more skilled physicians, more specialists, and more
professional nurses than any other nation in the world. Most of the advances in
healthcare technology, pharmacology, and medical science have originated in the
United States. Applicants to medical schools in the United States compete with
applicants from other nations seeking the world’s best medical education. The
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 allocated about $30
billion to develop a national health information technology (IT)
infrastructure. Yet the expected return on investment in technology, unlike
advances in pharmacology and medical science, has not been fully realized. In
the book Curing Health Care: New Strategies for Quality Improvement, Dr.
Donald Berwick and colleagues wrote, “[T]ens of billions of dollars have gone
into IT systems in healthcare, . . . but patients and care providers have very
little to show for it.” The answer is not
by spending more.”
“If working harder
and spending more is not the answer, what is? Healthcare systems are full of
waste and experience an enormous amount of variation and many preventable
mistakes. Furthermore, constraints and bottlenecks need careful management to
get the most value for the money spent. The ailments of healthcare today are
comorbid. Hence a direct, concentrated triage of the system is needed.”
“Other afflicted
industries have found effective remedies for similar challenges. While
acknowledging the uniqueness of humans and the complexity of healthcare delivery,
three industrially based methodologies have been applied successfully in
healthcare systems worldwide to achieve dramatic results. These are:
1. Lean—a
systematic approach to eliminate waste
2. Six
Sigma—a rigorous, data-driven process to reduce variation and eradicate
defects
3. Constraints
Management—a breakthrough methodology to focus efforts and manage a
system’s bottlenecks and other constraints.”
And so this is the
prelude for a series of postings I want to deliver on one of the most important
problems facing our country today…..how to make healthcare more affordable. As stated in the beginning of this posting, I
will not be delving into the social and political aspects of this subject
simply because this is a subject that equally impacts Republicans, Democrats
and Independents all over this great country.
My focus will simply be one of relating, through the eyes of these
authors, how we can improve the “state of the business” so to speak in the
healthcare industry which is the primary reason this book was written.
Bob Sproull
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