POCT in Emergency Rooms: One Key Factor for Process Streamlining with Lean Management
Author(s) -
Verena Lindenau-Stockfisch,
Julia Searle,
Martin Möckel
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
conference papers in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2314-5862
pISSN - 2314-534X
DOI - 10.1155/2013/143985
Subject(s) - overcrowding , lean manufacturing , value stream mapping , emergency department , medical emergency , operations management , kaizen , medicine , quality (philosophy) , patient satisfaction , business , nursing , engineering , economics , economic growth , philosophy , epistemology
Overcrowding is a common problem in Emergency Departments (ED) worldwide and has a negative impact on patient satisfaction and, more importantly, patient safety. So, the Emergency Department of the secondary-care hospital Paul Gerhardt Stift in Wittenberg, Germany, was faced with increasing numbers of patients. Lean management was introduced to analyse, optimise, and standardise ED processes. Consequently, a project group concentrated on “cycling muda” which is to identify waste and cost drivers along a representative patient path using one suitable Lean tool: mapping the current state in a value stream. As a result, it became clear that both patients and staff suffered from immense waiting times that lead to risky patient care and employee frustration. By subsequently eliminating the waste drivers and designing a high-quality patient flow process creating standards supported by state-of-the-art technology, the hospital’s ED turned into a streamlined department with reduced waiting times offering employees a satisfactory and modern workplace where patients benefit from first-class care.
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