Article Type
Changed
Wed, 12/12/2018 - 10:05

How one hospital benefited from applying LEAN principles

 

The symptoms of burnout include emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal efficacy, and burnout is a widespread problem among hospitalists; recent data suggest that half of physicians are experiencing at least one such symptom.

A stressed-out health care provider stands with her hand on her forehead.

Health care leaders are increasingly concerned that these levels of physician burnout pose a threat to patient quality and safety. “As a result, some health care systems are shifting emphasis from the Triple Aim – population health, reduced costs, and patient satisfaction – to the Quadruple Aim, which incorporates health care provider wellness,” according to a recent abstract.

The authors began their own attempt to address the problem when Penn State Health in Dauphin County, Pa., built a stand-alone children’s hospital and experienced bed demands that exceeded bed availability, creating decreased organizational efficiency, high stress, and elevated physician burnout.

The LEAN principles offer a process-focused, customer-centered methodology that improves efficiency and quality. “We redesigned our service line using LEAN principles, such as ‘staff to demand’ and ‘standardize work,’ ” the authors wrote. “To ‘staff to demand,’ we hired three additional FTE [full-time equivalent employees]. This allowed creation of two rounding teams ([up] from one) and reduced our patient-to-attending ratio from 15:1 to 8:1. Workflow was resequenced and standardized, which enabled teams to see discharges at the start of rounds. We also provided in-house evening and overnight resident supervision. Our model permitted flexibility in physicians’ schedules, deemphasized reliance on RVUs, and heightened purpose and efficiency in work as determinants of providers’ value-adding capacity.”

As a result, both service line and hospital efficiency improved and faculty stress decreased in their hospital. “Mean stress scores decreased from 23 (preintervention) to 15 over the first 2 years, and has remained steady for a period of 3 years. Our divisional work-life balance measurement 2 years after the intervention was 85%, well above the reported average of 41%. We have maintained a low physician turnover rate at 3.5% over the last 3 years.”
 

Reference

Keefer L et al. LEAN in: Our secrets to decreasing provider stress, maximizing efficiency on a pediatric hospitalist service [abstract]. Accessed April 6, 2018.


 

Publications
Topics
Sections

How one hospital benefited from applying LEAN principles

How one hospital benefited from applying LEAN principles

 

The symptoms of burnout include emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal efficacy, and burnout is a widespread problem among hospitalists; recent data suggest that half of physicians are experiencing at least one such symptom.

A stressed-out health care provider stands with her hand on her forehead.

Health care leaders are increasingly concerned that these levels of physician burnout pose a threat to patient quality and safety. “As a result, some health care systems are shifting emphasis from the Triple Aim – population health, reduced costs, and patient satisfaction – to the Quadruple Aim, which incorporates health care provider wellness,” according to a recent abstract.

The authors began their own attempt to address the problem when Penn State Health in Dauphin County, Pa., built a stand-alone children’s hospital and experienced bed demands that exceeded bed availability, creating decreased organizational efficiency, high stress, and elevated physician burnout.

The LEAN principles offer a process-focused, customer-centered methodology that improves efficiency and quality. “We redesigned our service line using LEAN principles, such as ‘staff to demand’ and ‘standardize work,’ ” the authors wrote. “To ‘staff to demand,’ we hired three additional FTE [full-time equivalent employees]. This allowed creation of two rounding teams ([up] from one) and reduced our patient-to-attending ratio from 15:1 to 8:1. Workflow was resequenced and standardized, which enabled teams to see discharges at the start of rounds. We also provided in-house evening and overnight resident supervision. Our model permitted flexibility in physicians’ schedules, deemphasized reliance on RVUs, and heightened purpose and efficiency in work as determinants of providers’ value-adding capacity.”

As a result, both service line and hospital efficiency improved and faculty stress decreased in their hospital. “Mean stress scores decreased from 23 (preintervention) to 15 over the first 2 years, and has remained steady for a period of 3 years. Our divisional work-life balance measurement 2 years after the intervention was 85%, well above the reported average of 41%. We have maintained a low physician turnover rate at 3.5% over the last 3 years.”
 

Reference

Keefer L et al. LEAN in: Our secrets to decreasing provider stress, maximizing efficiency on a pediatric hospitalist service [abstract]. Accessed April 6, 2018.


 

 

The symptoms of burnout include emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal efficacy, and burnout is a widespread problem among hospitalists; recent data suggest that half of physicians are experiencing at least one such symptom.

A stressed-out health care provider stands with her hand on her forehead.

Health care leaders are increasingly concerned that these levels of physician burnout pose a threat to patient quality and safety. “As a result, some health care systems are shifting emphasis from the Triple Aim – population health, reduced costs, and patient satisfaction – to the Quadruple Aim, which incorporates health care provider wellness,” according to a recent abstract.

The authors began their own attempt to address the problem when Penn State Health in Dauphin County, Pa., built a stand-alone children’s hospital and experienced bed demands that exceeded bed availability, creating decreased organizational efficiency, high stress, and elevated physician burnout.

The LEAN principles offer a process-focused, customer-centered methodology that improves efficiency and quality. “We redesigned our service line using LEAN principles, such as ‘staff to demand’ and ‘standardize work,’ ” the authors wrote. “To ‘staff to demand,’ we hired three additional FTE [full-time equivalent employees]. This allowed creation of two rounding teams ([up] from one) and reduced our patient-to-attending ratio from 15:1 to 8:1. Workflow was resequenced and standardized, which enabled teams to see discharges at the start of rounds. We also provided in-house evening and overnight resident supervision. Our model permitted flexibility in physicians’ schedules, deemphasized reliance on RVUs, and heightened purpose and efficiency in work as determinants of providers’ value-adding capacity.”

As a result, both service line and hospital efficiency improved and faculty stress decreased in their hospital. “Mean stress scores decreased from 23 (preintervention) to 15 over the first 2 years, and has remained steady for a period of 3 years. Our divisional work-life balance measurement 2 years after the intervention was 85%, well above the reported average of 41%. We have maintained a low physician turnover rate at 3.5% over the last 3 years.”
 

Reference

Keefer L et al. LEAN in: Our secrets to decreasing provider stress, maximizing efficiency on a pediatric hospitalist service [abstract]. Accessed April 6, 2018.


 

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica