Lean on me

23
Lean Healthcare Forum 2006 1

description

by Jan Filochowski of Judge Business School shown at the 1st Lean Healthcare Forum 2006 on 25th June 2006 ran by the Lean Enterprise Academy

Transcript of Lean on me

Page 1: Lean on me

Lean Healthcare Forum 20061

Page 2: Lean on me

2

“Lean on Me”

Jan FilochowskiNHS Trouble Shooter and Turnaround Advisor Senior Associate, Judge Business School, Cambridge

Talk for Launch of the Lean Healthcare ForumJanuary 25th, National Motorcycle Museum, Birmingham

Page 3: Lean on me

3

Why Lean?

• A fascinating, convincing story

• A different way of seeing, organising and managing work

• Robust and durable but not too dogmatic: there for the long-haul

Page 4: Lean on me

4

Why Health?

• Long linear processes

• Characterised by long waits (widely spread) blockages

• Information flows of vital importance

Page 5: Lean on me

5

Success and failures in using lean

• Choose something important BUT• Don’t make it overambitious

• There must be sufficient “buy in” at a senior managerial level and amongst key implementers

• Preset target savings will torpedo the effort

• Don’t try to impose: bottom-up not top-down

Page 6: Lean on me

6

Some areas of actual and possible application

• Hearing aids (important but limited)

Page 7: Lean on me

7

Hearing Aids - Before

Patient

Information

Decisions

Time4D

15m365D 336D15m 30m

30mGP C A A

Page 8: Lean on me

8

Summary of Process: 1

BeforeNo. ofContacts

4

Time ofContacts

90mins.

Time ofProcess

705days

Page 9: Lean on me

9

Hearing Aids - 2000

Patient

Information

Decisions

Time4D

15m 30m 30mGP A A21D 35D

Page 10: Lean on me

10

Summary of Process: 2

Before 2000No. ofContacts

4 3

Time ofContacts

90mins.

75mins.

Time ofProcess

705days

60days

Page 11: Lean on me

11

Hearing Aids - 2000 (oops!)

Patient

Information

Decisions

Time4D

15m21D 4-42D 35D

15m 30m 30mGP GPorCA AA

15m21D

Page 12: Lean on me

12

Summary of Process: 3

Before 2000 2000 oopsNo. ofContacts

4 3 5

Time ofContacts

90mins.

75mins.

105 mins.

Time ofProcess

705days

60days

101days

Page 13: Lean on me

13

Hearing Aids - 2001

Patient

Information

Decisions

Time4D

15m 45m 30mGP A A21D 35D

Page 14: Lean on me

14

Summary of Process: 4

Before 2000 2000 oops 2001 propNo. ofContacts

4 3 5 3

Time ofContacts

90mins.

75mins.

105 mins.

90 mins.

Time ofProcess

705days

60days

101days

60days

Page 15: Lean on me

15

Some areas of actual and possible application

• Hearing aids (important but limited)

• Emergency admissions

• 18 week end to end target

Page 16: Lean on me

16

Some things I haven’t liked (not lean)

• Redesign as a self-evident mantra

• The patient pathway as “the answer”: it isn’t, it’s one pathway

• Completeness and detail as the objective

Page 17: Lean on me

17

Some things I’ve particularly liked (1)

• Focus on the real goal

• Goes for simple answers: complexity the enemy

• Rightskilling rather than upskilling

• Capacity as an enabler (of flow) rather than an absolute constraint

Page 18: Lean on me

18

Some things I’ve particularly liked (2)

Page 19: Lean on me

19

Page 20: Lean on me

20

Page 21: Lean on me

21

Some things I’ve particularly liked (2)

• Kaizen (a relentless algorithm)

• Imperfection is intrinsic to our efforts, so let’s work with it

Page 22: Lean on me

22

“Many people dream of success.To me success can only be achieved through

repeated failure and introspection. In fact, success represents the 1- percent of your work which results only from the 99 percent that

is called failure”

by Soichiro Honda

Page 23: Lean on me

Lean Healthcare Forum 200623