A sign of a learning organization (e.g., those which have adopted a Lean philosophy) is the unending commitment to getting better. When you go to one of these hospitals and say, "How are you doing?" the answer is inevitably something modest like, "Pretty well, but we have so much too learn." Also, such hospitals are keen to celebrate the improvement activities of their front-line staff and managers. One such example is Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center in LaCrosse, Wisconsin, under the leadership of CEO Jeff Thompson. Every Friday, 200 managers and staff gather at 8:00am to celebrate and recognize recent improvement activities, and then a written summary is distributed throughout the hospital. Here's last week's summary:
And remember: “The
best way to predict the future is to create it!” I am very excited to
see the future we will create together!
March 28th Improvement Event Recap:
At last week’s
Improvement Event there we saw three examples of our Staff’s passion,
initiative and talent! Here’s a few highlights:
·
Shawn Stevenson (Business Development and
Marketing) presented on “Managing Staff Workloads and Stress”. Being
unsatisfied with his department’s EPS Results, Shawn decided to take
some unique and effective steps. In working
with his staff, he determined an imbalance in workload was the primary
driver of increased stress and lower than desired engagement scores. He
worked hard with is team to fix this. Using the A3 tool and the PDSA
(Plan, Do, Study, Act) process he’s expecting
big things in the next employee survey! Check in with Shawn if you
didn’t get a chance to see one of the tools he invented – THE
STRESS-O-METER!
o
Observation: Some would say “Attitude is
Everything”. Poor attitudes in our staff can be a result of being
Overwhelmed – and that one is on us! Shawn did a great job in
recognizing this and doing something about it!
·
Lynn Dosch (Purchasing) and Michelle Tilson, RN
(Wound Center), teamed up to present on “Reduction in Rental Equipment
Expense”. They noticed a significant increase in the use of Low Air
Loss Overlays for the prevention
of Pressure Ulcers. They wondered whether we were truly using these
rented overlays only when they would help our patients, or if their use
had become routine. As a result of asking the question, and deciding to
take action together (using a PDSA data-driven
process) they were able to reduce expenses by more than $23,000 per
year while seeing improved outcomes.
o
Observation: If every leader at the improvement
event found similar savings in their departments we would reduce
expenses by $4mil! This is a great example of what we can accomplish
when Supply Chain and our Clinical
Areas work together! Go team!
·
Alan Eber (Facility Operations) and Tammy
Anderson (Inpatient Psychiatry) presented on the “New Inpatient
Behavioral Health Building”. We saw a great example of how the Process
Improvement Tools, when applied collaboratively
between Facility Operations and Clinical Operations can make a lasting
impact! As a result of this kind of collaboration, we now have a
beautiful facility that fosters a “best-in-class” healing environment
for our patients and is one of the most energy efficient
buildings of its kind in the world!
o
Observation: With an annual energy cost savings
of ~$50,000 and a 50-year building design life, we will be “stuck” with
saving millions of dollars over the coming decades. Imagine what we
would have been “stuck” with
if we did not have such a talented team working together to bring this
kind of value to our patients and our community!
Mark E. Platt
SVP Business Services
1 comment:
It's always great to hear about hospital improvement efforts... and recognizing people for their improvement work is very important.
I'm curious if the "unending improvement" continues beyond the formal "improvement event" and, if so, how?
I see a lot of "episodic improvement" taking place (through "Rapid Improvement Events," but hopefully that's followed up by ongoing improvement that happens each and every day...
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