SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Short introduction to Lean for NHS Trusts
Revised March 08
- 2 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Agenda
• Introductions
• Introduction to Lean and History
• Main Concept of Lean: Value Stream Mapping
• Main Concept of Lean: 5S
• Main Concepts of Lean: 7 Waste
• Waste Walk
- 3 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
What is Lean
• Focus on Value from a Customer (Patient) point of view on every step of
process
• Obsession on removing waste within the ‘whole system’
• Bottom up approach in identifying value and waste – assumption that much
of waste and value is hidden
• A true lean system would “flow” and need little command and control
Leads to sustainable change ingrained in the ‘DNA’ of an organisation
- 4 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Lean approach is significantly different from traditional
approaches to change
Other approaches
• Resources focus on meeting Goal
setting/meeting Targets & assurance
• Educate people to work their specific job
smarter
• Have a leader that drives change – hope
other follow
• Command and Control People to ensure
delivery – aim to hit target
• Batch and Queue – maximise ‘efficiency’,
use overheads to manage
• Flavour of the year change initiative
• Resources focus on meeting Goal
setting/meeting Targets & assurance
• Educate people to work their specific job
smarter
• Have a leader that drives change – hope
other follow
• Command and Control People to ensure
delivery – aim to hit target
• Batch and Queue – maximise ‘efficiency’,
use overheads to manage
• Flavour of the year change initiative
Lean Approach
• Resources focused on understand the
value and value stream for your
‘products’ – focus on removing waste
• Educate people to make the system flow
faster
• Aim for all team members to be leaders
and followers
• Intrinsically trust your people to deliver –
beyond expected results
• Aim for one piece flow – maximise
‘effectiveness’ , eliminate overheads
• Obsession with continuous improvement
• Resources focused on understand the
value and value stream for your
‘products’ – focus on removing waste
• Educate people to make the system flow
faster
• Aim for all team members to be leaders
and followers
• Intrinsically trust your people to deliver –
beyond expected results
• Aim for one piece flow – maximise
‘effectiveness’ , eliminate overheads
• Obsession with continuous improvement
- 5 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Increasingly
Complex
Vehicles and
Diverse Market
Postwar Boom
(Mass ideas
cemented in)
Emphasis on
Finance and
Accounting
“Catch up
with US”
TOYOTA
PRODUCTION
SYSTEM
• Small Market
• Few Resources
• Need Cash
• Lousy Quality
1st Oil
Shock
Continuous
Improvement
Fantastic
Success!
Deming and Juran
“Quality”
“Taichi Ohno”
Continuous Flow
Supermarket ‘Pull systems’
1945 2008
TOYOTA
1973
Big 3 Market
Losses and
mergers
Relentless Continuous
Improvement
GM
Large-Lot Production
Automation
Top Down
Restructuring/
Downsizing
Market
Expansion
• Every increasing
market
• Vast Resources
• Infrastructure
1990
Top Down
‘Lean’
The Origins of Lean: Mass production failed to adapt to
change - lean manufacturing emerged as the alternative
- 6 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Benefits of Lean
• Long term sustainable improvement
– Not a short term ‘financial fix’
– Financial results often surpass expected
• Relatively low investment
– No costly assets/infrastructure
– No over reliance on external consultants
– Low investment of new technologies
– Waste elimination drives financial benefits for investment
• Straightforward principles and concepts
– Not a complex management fad understood by a few
• Tried and Tested
– It works!
Improves quality of services and patient safety – Every patient matters
- 7 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
The benefits of applying lean for over 40 years is clear
for Toyota
Global Car
Companies Compared
ToyotaToyota
Sales
(volume)
8.2m8.2m
Sales
(£bn)
176176
Profit
(£bn)
12.512.5
Market Values
(£bn)
208208
Workforce
285,000285,000
GMGM 8.3m8.3m 192192 -10.9-10.9 2020 335,000335,000
Daimler/Chrsyler*Daimler/Chrsyler* 4.8m4.8m 185185 -1.7*-1.7* 6565 382,000382,000
FordFord 6.6m6.6m 153153 -12.7*-12.7* 1616 300,000300,000
VolkswagenVolkswagen 5.2m5.2m 118118 5.25.2 4343 344,000344,000
*2006 *Chrysler only)
Source: PriceWaterhouseCopers, 2005
- 8 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Where does Lean Fit in the NHS?Where does Lean Fit in the NHS?
- 9 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Productivity in the NHS has not improved since 1995, in fact has got
worse since 2001
Source ONS
• “For hospital and community health
services, the rise in staff and
purchased goods and services has
outpaced the rise in activity,
whether or not the index includes a
quality adjustment*” - ONS
• Output increases were mainly due
to activity, primary care
consultations, drug use, rise in
quality of health care.
• Input costs were mainly of labour
costs, use of non NHS resources
and purchased goods
– 67% increase input in volume or
resources from 1995 to 2006
– 2006 (89.7Billion, 7.5% of GDP)
* to reflect the higher proportion of patients surviving
for more than 30 days after hospital admission.
Better use of resources is at the heart of a Lean Transformation
- 10 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
We are in the 3rd Stage of systems changes to the NHS and Lean
Transformation Aligns with this
From Christine Beesely: Chief Nursing Officer
! LEAN SIT HERE
- 11 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
“Lean’s focus on delivering care is a
refreshing antidote to benchmarks, targets
and the traditional approach to performance
management. The emphasis it puts on
looking at the whole system is valuable.”
Nigel Edwards, Policy Director, NHS
Confederation
- 12 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Only we can make this happen!
“Our success in moving to this next stage of
the journey doesn’t just rely on me making
the system more flexible and responsive, it
also relies on the right response from local
leaders across the NHS”
David Nicholson NHS Chief Executive
Dec 2007
- 13 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Principles of LeanPrinciples of Lean
- 14 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Five Key Concepts underpin Lean
• Value
• Value Stream
• Flow
• Pull
• Perfection
FLOW PULL
VALUE STREAM VALUE PERFECTION
A value stream does not sit in isolation but is part of a bigger system
- 15 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Five Key Concepts underpin Lean
Value
•The customer normally
defines value
•What does the process
add that someone is
willing to pay for
What this means What this means in the NHS
•Anything that improves
patient care and
experience, otherwise it is
waste:
• Waiting and Delay
• Poor Outcome
• Adverse incidents
• Reprocessing
• Customer is normally the
patient/GP, but may be
other stakeholders (who is
the customer?)
Waste not only costs Trust money there is a detrimental loss to
society
- 16 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Five Key Concepts underpin Lean
Value Stream
•The core functions or
steps that deliver the
value
• Considers all steps
from start to finish
across ALL boundaries
What this means What this means in the NHS
• For a patient this would
normally start from GP
visit to a satisfactory
conclusion (from a
patient point of view)
•A Hospital Trust may
work on a value stream
that defines the
GP/primary care as a
supplier
• Supplier is still part of
value stream
- 17 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Five Key Concepts underpin Lean
Flow
•The value adding
activities must flow
without blockages
(metaphor of tap
water/river)
• Blockages are caused
by :
• Batching
• Multiple processes
all adding little value
• Misalignment of
demand versus
capacity
What this means What this means in the NHS
• Adapt processes that
flow with demand, have
fewer steps/handovers
/rework
• Areas that stop flow
• Multiple referrals
• Multiple pathways
• Patient Batching
• Misunderstanding of
demand by time of
day/day/month
- 18 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Discussion
Our analysis indicates most queues
within the NHS are relatively stable,
suggesting that capacity and demand
variation are the cause.
Silvester & Walley, June 2005
- 19 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Five Key Concepts underpin Lean
Pull
• Two ways pull can be
applied
• Working on actual
demand (assuming
no capacity
constraints)
• Pulling the whole
process by using the
bottleneck process
as a signal
What this means What this means in the NHS
•Understand whether
processes can be
• pulled by patient (e.g.
walk in STD/Blood
Test)
• Signalled by
bottleneck (Empty
beds drive a process of
pulling the next
patient)
- 20 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Five Key Concepts underpin Lean
Perfection
• Continuously improve
the process in light of
• Value as defined by
Customer
• Best
practise/experimental
learning
• Resource
opportunities/constra
ints
• Value Streams
interactions
• Innovation
What this means What this means in the NHS
•Teams that
• Do the Work
• Improve the work!
• Establishing a drum
beat of continuous review
e.g. that works on a
daily/weekly/monthly
cycle
Perfection is the aim that is never reached
- 21 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Overview of Lean ConceptsOverview of Lean Concepts
- 22 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Value Stream MappingValue Stream Mapping
- 23 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Traditional Process Improvement versus Lean Process
Improvement
• Calculating journey times and identifying
bottlenecks
• Focus on activity levels at each step
• Look at activity steps as a whole rather then
product specific
• Aim to ‘push’ things through faster
Traditional Process Mapping
• Start with Takt time (how often is 1
created/needed)
• Focus on Waste, Rework, Scrap, Set up
time at each step
• Align Cycle Time to Takt Time
• Product flows measured individually
• Obsession with measuring cycle time to
takt time
Lean
- 24 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Value Stream Mapping can be carried out in all
environment – including administration
Example Insurance Company Value Stream for claims
Register
CT-4hrs
 6.5
 7 hrs
RW 5%
TAKT 11s
Open post,
collate, scan
& log, policy
no. issue
Scan
380
CT-0.25 hrs
 72
 7 hrs
RW 20%
TAKT 11s
Load, IFA#,
MLA,
Missing Info
check,
Premium
calc
CT- 120 hrs
 20
 7 hrs
RW 5%
TAKT 11s
Review info,
medical
reports,
allocate rating
etc
Underwrite
CT- 0.1 hrs
 5
 7 hrs
RW 5%
TAKT 11s
Advise
acceptance
and issue
policy
P & P
Daily
post
24 hrs2 hrs
CT- 0.20 hrs
 13
 7 hrs
RW 5%
TAKT 11s
Advise
acceptance
confirm dates &
QC
Acceptance
96 hrs 48 hrs 24 hrs
4 hrs 0.25hrs 120 hrs 0.2 hrs 0.1 hrs
304 1417 435 380
Customer Customer
Work
Manager
Daily Task Allocation
Process CT=124.55 hrs Total cycle Time = 318.55 hrs Lead time = 45.5 days
- 25 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Lean concepts: 5SLean concepts: 5S
- 26 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
What Are The 5Ss?
Sort
Stabilise
Shine
Standardise
Sustain
Organisation
Orderliness
Cleanliness
Adherence
Self-discipline
5S is a process and method for creating and maintaining an
organized, clean, high-performance workplace
- 27 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
SortSort
- 28 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Sort
In most organisations physical and
information items are collected and never
disposed/put away long after they are
required on ‘value add’ activities
The continous moving, counting, storing all
create waste and interupt flow
- 29 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Sort - Benefits
• Frees up space
• Removes clutter/obstacles
• Stops people adding to it
• Stops hoarding
• Improves safety
• Controls what is in an area
• Feeds into the Stabilise process
- 30 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Sort - Red Tagging
• Obsolete, unneeded?
• Stored here, used elsewhere?
• Used infrequently?
• What is this used for?
• What do we need ?
• What do we not need ?
• What can we remove ?
A visible way to identify items that are not needed or are in the wrong place
Feb 2002
Medical records : university hospitals of Morecambe bay
- 32 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Sort (Organise)
Distinguish Between What Is And Is Not Needed
- 33 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
StabiliseStabilise
- 34 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Stabilise
Employees who work in cluttered and untidy
factories think that searching for equipment
and paperwork is a normal part of their job.
"A Place For
Everything
and
Everything In
Its Place"
- 35 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Stabilise (Orderliness)
• Stabilise ensures that there is a place for everything
and that everything is in it’s place.
• Determine the best location for all necessary items.
• Determine how many of each item will be stored in a given
location and set limits on the space allocated.
• Locate items in racks, containers, shadow, boards
• Increase job efficiency by making it easy for anyone to find, use,
and return items.
• Organise things in a orderly and tidy manner and place things
close to the point of use
- 36 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Stabilise
- 37 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
ShineShine
- 38 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Shine
•A dirty workplace is often tolerated –
however it often hides underlying problems
within processes.
•In a clean environment dirt can easily be
viewed (for example spillages, leaks)
•In the NHS Shine has the additional benefits
to patient safety and perception
- 39 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Shine (Cleanliness)
This relates specifically to cleaning. It means:
• Eliminating all forms of contamination
• Eliminating dirt, dust, fluids, and other debris to make the work area clean.
• Finding ways to keep the workplace clean
• Finding ways to keep the workplace clean at all times. For example,
eliminate sources of contamination, such as dust.
• Adopting cleaning as a form of inspection
• Adopting cleaning as a form of inspection. Cleaning exposes abnormal and
pre-failure conditions such as oil leaks, excessive corrosion on a lifting
point, chips in a cutting tool.
• Making cleaning part of everyday work
• Making cleaning part of everyday work for all everybody. A clean
environment builds pride in the workplace.
Keeping the work place clean at all times
- 40 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Shine - Benefits
• Makes problems easier to find
• Creates a better working environment
• Aids efficiency and reduces accidents
• Supports the Standardisation process
• Better customer perception
- 41 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
StandardiseStandardise
- 42 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Standardise (Adherence)
1: Sort (Organise)
2: Stabilise (Orderliness)
3: Shine (Cleanliness)
4: Standardise (Process)
5: Sustain (Self-discipline)
Standardise is the Process to maintain and monitor the first
three S’s
- 43 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Standardise (Process)
• Workers
• Complete Day with equipment in place according to standard
• Quarterly Red Tag Sort Exercise
• Regular review of Stabilise (order in the workplace) and improvement
•Information/Infrastructure
• Waste Disposal/Storage Bins exist
• Information Board on expected standards to be followed
•Audit
• Inspection Audit Quarterly and results fedback to team
• Auditor could be another department
- 44 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Standardisation - Benefits
• Provides schedule of 5S activities
• Ensures deterioration does not occur
• Makes first 3S’s a habit
• Starts problem solving/improvement activities
• Promotes discipline, Sustains the process
- 45 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
SustainSustain
- 46 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Sustain (Self-Discipline)
• Ensure the 5S become the DNA of the organisation
• Newcomers are properly trained
• Process and procedures are habitual
• Benefits are clearly articulated to get ‘buy in’
• Standard is accepted by all
Sustain means continual improvement is evident from the regular
inspection tours
- 47 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Sustain Benefits
• Establish standards for all to achieve
• Leads to improve safety
• Maintains a “tour” ready status
• Promotes pride and respect in the work place
• Basis for improvement activities
- 48 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
In which areas would 5s benefit this Trust?
- 49 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
7 Wastes7 Wastes
- 50 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Introduction to 7 Wastes (TBC)
• Waste is the symptom that shows leakage of value
• They are many dimension of Waste
• Learning to identify ‘waste’ helps uncover root causes
- 51 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Description
• Waste is the opposite to value and is any activity which consumes
resources but adds no value, it can be categorised into the following
traditional seven wastes to which we have added the waste of human
potential
– Over production
– Motion
– Transport
– Waiting
– Processing
– Inventory
– Defects
– Human potential
- 52 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
The Waste of Over Production
The production of goods in excess of the requirements
• Examples of over production waste are:
– Unnecessary follow ups
– Repeated questions and information sharing with patient
– Repeated Diagnostics
– Unneeded consultant to consultant referrals
– Overuse of supplies
• Effects of over production waste are:
– Excessive wait times
– Longer end to end journey
– Potential procurement of unnecessary equipment
– Cost and Inventory of excessive supplies
– Frustration to patient/GP
- 53 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
The Waste of Motion
Inefficient ergonomics in the workplace resulting in unnecessary motion
• Examples of waste of motion are:
– Reaching over for equipment/tools
– Moving to see work
– Excessive stretching bending
– Double handling
– Walking to and from work centres /areas
– Poorly designed work areas
• Effects of waste of motion are:
– Increased cycle time for operation resulting in overall increase in lead time
– Looking for parts / tools out of visual sight
– Worker fatigue
- 54 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
The Waste of Transport
Inefficient transportation of materials, patients, equipment, etc.
• Examples of waste of motion are:
– Inefficient transport routes
– Delay in waiting for transportation
– Complex material/patient flow paths within the work place
– Double handling
– Ineffective material handling equipment resulting in several journeys
• Effects of waste of motion are:
– Increased waiting/cycle and overall lead time
– Operator fatigue
– Opportunity for injury to patient/damage to goods
– Poor communication across long distances
- 55 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
The Waste of Waiting
Ineffective use of time, where patients/materials are not having value added
• Examples of waste of waiting are:
– Waiting for appointment/referral
– Waiting for material handling equipment to be available
– Waiting for patients/work
– Watching machines processing
– Queuing
– Waiting for the answer (support staff)
• Effects of waste of waiting are:
– Increased Non value added time
– Ineffective use of resources
– Increased work in progress
– Increased cycle times/leadtimes
- 56 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
The Waste of Inventory
Inventory in excess of the requirement to make the job and in excess of
suitable safety stocks
• Examples of unnecessary inventory are:
– Excess stock of supplies
– Obsolete stock
– Patients that have started on the pathway but never complete (long tail)
• Effects of unnecessary inventory are:
– Supplies/Materials
• Increased space
• Inventory is a liability. Money could be invested more usefully
• Increase chances of obsolescence
– Long Tail Patients
• Frustration and complaints
• Potential for complications
• Loss to society
• Burden of continual processing of patient information
- 57 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
The Waste of Defects
Product manufactured outside the acceptable limits
• Examples of defects are:
– Scrap of Materials/Supplies
– Rework on Patient
– Expectation not met/managed
– Returns to Trust
– Customer complaints
• Effects of defects are:
– Increased costs
– Increased capacity requirements
– Requirement for extra materials
– Rescheduling of work
– Poor delivery performance
– Fire fighting
- 58 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Implementation OverviewImplementation Overview
- 59 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Some ‘watch outs’ during Implementation
• Don’t Assume that Lean equals using the Lean Tools
– Lean Tools are only part of the way to get to perfection – the most important tool is genuine desire to
improve
• Don’t Assume that Rapid Improvement Events is all that’s required with the
help of a change manager
– Commitment from the Top for sustainability
– Provides resources, engagement, change management, stakeholder management
• Don’t assume that all resources should be focused on adding
customer(patient) value
– Stakeholders work the ‘system’, resources need to be aligned to deliver a continuing evolving system
that meets all stakeholder expectations, otherwise the system will fail.
• No involvement from staff at the ‘coal face’ will mean no engagement – and
no sustainability – not matter how good the solution is
– Respect People and differences
– Work from where you are
- 60 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
A lean program can take for 18 to 36 months before it is sustained – we
need to ask key questions at each phase
Phase 1
Aligning
Lean with
Trust
Strategy
What will work in our
environment ?
Phase 2
Blueprint for
Change
Process Pilot
Lean foundation
Education
Phase 3
Roll out future Lean in
core areas
Lean sustained
Phase 4
Executive
Education
Have we got
the
Appetite?
Resource Management & Benefit Realisation
Culture and Behavioural Change for Lean
How do we sustain the new
way of working?
2-3months 3-6months 12months – 24months
Process Audit
Drum beat of continuous
improvement
- 61 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
Lean is all about people
“Plan with the people,
Begin with what they have,
Build on what they know,
Of the best leaders,
When the task is accomplished
the people all remark
We have done it ourselves”
Lao Tzu
- 62 -
Confidential not to be used without consent
kinetik solutions limited
E:bebetter@kinetik.uk.com
W: www.kinetik.uk.com
O: (+44)870 1997132
M: (+44)780 3009053

More Related Content

PDF
Lean in the Service Industry
PDF
Standard work in_services_final
PPTX
Lean system in services industry presentation ahmed adel
PDF
Lean march24
PDF
Process innovation framework
PDF
Initial Presentation 2010
PPTX
Lean Culture Introduction
PPTX
Lean Fundamentals Course Preview
Lean in the Service Industry
Standard work in_services_final
Lean system in services industry presentation ahmed adel
Lean march24
Process innovation framework
Initial Presentation 2010
Lean Culture Introduction
Lean Fundamentals Course Preview

What's hot (15)

PDF
Culture for implementing_lean
PPTX
Why Chinese Manufacturers Must Adopt Lean Manufacturing to Stay Competitive
PPTX
ITIL Change Management - Plan and deploy changes with confidence
PPTX
Lean In Manufacturing and Service Industry
PPTX
The Lean Service Machine
PPTX
Customer defined standard
PDF
How Grupo Navis Powers Strategic Growth with Enterprise-Wide Digital Transfor...
PDF
ITSM_Optimitsm
PPTX
Continuous Improvement techniques
PPTX
Lean management ppt
PPTX
Lean management
PPTX
Modern Facility Management
PPT
Lean manufacturing & 6s
PPTX
Risk based decision making - Rev 4
PDF
Six sigma it_service_delivery
Culture for implementing_lean
Why Chinese Manufacturers Must Adopt Lean Manufacturing to Stay Competitive
ITIL Change Management - Plan and deploy changes with confidence
Lean In Manufacturing and Service Industry
The Lean Service Machine
Customer defined standard
How Grupo Navis Powers Strategic Growth with Enterprise-Wide Digital Transfor...
ITSM_Optimitsm
Continuous Improvement techniques
Lean management ppt
Lean management
Modern Facility Management
Lean manufacturing & 6s
Risk based decision making - Rev 4
Six sigma it_service_delivery
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPTX
Presentation
PDF
Lean thinking for the nhs
PDF
Lean Results from the Wirral
PDF
Bringing lean to life
PPTX
Transforming nhs choices using agile and lean ux agile manc
PPT
Going Lean in Health Care
PDF
raju deshpande
PDF
Informa Survival: El progreso puede matar
PDF
Lancom 5: Domains and Mappings
PDF
Lean Solutions in NHS – Midland Forum
PDF
Google Design Sprinting Webinar
PPTX
Usability & User-Centred Design
PPTX
Novel Research Data Delivery System Using REDCap 20131211
PDF
Four Blocks Literacy for Students with Complex Communication Needs
PDF
Lean Thinking for the NHS
PPTX
Frequency Measures for Healthcare Professioanls
PDF
‘Lingvo Internacia’ aŭ ‘internacia lingvo’? Kelkaj konsideroj pri la origina...
PDF
Esperanto, a language for a Global Identity Can Esperanto foster European ide...
PDF
Microsoft_2in1PC_ideathon_2016_ideaplant
PDF
Expediente caso arco minero del orinoco
Presentation
Lean thinking for the nhs
Lean Results from the Wirral
Bringing lean to life
Transforming nhs choices using agile and lean ux agile manc
Going Lean in Health Care
raju deshpande
Informa Survival: El progreso puede matar
Lancom 5: Domains and Mappings
Lean Solutions in NHS – Midland Forum
Google Design Sprinting Webinar
Usability & User-Centred Design
Novel Research Data Delivery System Using REDCap 20131211
Four Blocks Literacy for Students with Complex Communication Needs
Lean Thinking for the NHS
Frequency Measures for Healthcare Professioanls
‘Lingvo Internacia’ aŭ ‘internacia lingvo’? Kelkaj konsideroj pri la origina...
Esperanto, a language for a Global Identity Can Esperanto foster European ide...
Microsoft_2in1PC_ideathon_2016_ideaplant
Expediente caso arco minero del orinoco
Ad

Similar to Introduction to Lean NHS (20)

PDF
Introduction to lean7 handout
PDF
Lean midland june11
PDF
Lean midland june11
PDF
Lean london feb
PDF
Intermountain Health - Pres
PDF
Gp commissioning kinetik
PDF
Delivering high value healthcare through lean hospitals
PDF
The Lean Transformation at Cardinal Health
PDF
Health IT Summit Denver 2014 - "Anatomy of a Health System"
PPTX
Lean Veterinary Practice
PPTX
Digital Healthcare Revolution conference. 25.02.2016
PPTX
Local Government Authority Demand Innovation Workshop - Blue Ocean Strategy
PPTX
Redefining Workflows with Lean and Simulation
PPTX
PPTX
Leading an improvement project
PDF
eHealth Summit: "Case Study: The applied research for connected health (ARCH)...
PDF
Realizing the Potential of Lean Thinking in Healthcare
PPTX
Joint Working workshop
PPTX
Medicines Breakthrough Collaborative 1
Introduction to lean7 handout
Lean midland june11
Lean midland june11
Lean london feb
Intermountain Health - Pres
Gp commissioning kinetik
Delivering high value healthcare through lean hospitals
The Lean Transformation at Cardinal Health
Health IT Summit Denver 2014 - "Anatomy of a Health System"
Lean Veterinary Practice
Digital Healthcare Revolution conference. 25.02.2016
Local Government Authority Demand Innovation Workshop - Blue Ocean Strategy
Redefining Workflows with Lean and Simulation
Leading an improvement project
eHealth Summit: "Case Study: The applied research for connected health (ARCH)...
Realizing the Potential of Lean Thinking in Healthcare
Joint Working workshop
Medicines Breakthrough Collaborative 1

More from Kinetik Solutions Ltd (20)

PDF
Resistance to change
PDF
How to improve employee engagement
PDF
Top tools process_excellence
PDF
Culture for implementing lean
PDF
Modularity for Standard Work Procedures
PDF
Learning Lunch
PDF
Surgery rules that 'hurt' patients
PDF
Statistical Process Control: The red bead game
PDF
The Balance Scorecard: Presentation to the Institute of Electrical Engineers
PDF
How to Sustain Lean – The Key Elements
PDF
Lean midland presentation-161013
PDF
Leanlondon 19sep13
PDF
Collaborative learning
PDF
Culture for implementing_lean
PDF
How to improve_employee_engagement
PDF
Resistance change final_11_march
PDF
Top tools for process excellence
PDF
How to improve_employee_engagement
PDF
Top tools process_excellence
PDF
Culture for implementing_lean
Resistance to change
How to improve employee engagement
Top tools process_excellence
Culture for implementing lean
Modularity for Standard Work Procedures
Learning Lunch
Surgery rules that 'hurt' patients
Statistical Process Control: The red bead game
The Balance Scorecard: Presentation to the Institute of Electrical Engineers
How to Sustain Lean – The Key Elements
Lean midland presentation-161013
Leanlondon 19sep13
Collaborative learning
Culture for implementing_lean
How to improve_employee_engagement
Resistance change final_11_march
Top tools for process excellence
How to improve_employee_engagement
Top tools process_excellence
Culture for implementing_lean

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Building a Smart Pet Ecosystem: A Full Introduction to Zhejiang Beijing Techn...
PPTX
3. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE UNIIT 3^..pptx
PDF
Solara Labs: Empowering Health through Innovative Nutraceutical Solutions
PDF
Daniels 2024 Inclusive, Sustainable Development
PDF
TyAnn Osborn: A Visionary Leader Shaping Corporate Workforce Dynamics
PDF
Comments on Crystal Cloud and Energy Star.pdf
PPTX
sales presentation، Training Overview.pptx
PDF
Outsourced Audit & Assurance in USA Why Globus Finanza is Your Trusted Choice
PDF
pdfcoffee.com-opt-b1plus-sb-answers.pdfvi
PPTX
Astra-Investor- business Presentation (1).pptx
PPTX
Principles of Marketing, Industrial, Consumers,
PDF
NEW - FEES STRUCTURES (01-july-2024).pdf
PDF
Keppel_Proposed Divestment of M1 Limited
PDF
Charisse Litchman: A Maverick Making Neurological Care More Accessible
PDF
Ôn tập tiếng anh trong kinh doanh nâng cao
PPTX
Sales & Distribution Management , LOGISTICS, Distribution, Sales Managers
PPTX
svnfcksanfskjcsnvvjknsnvsdscnsncxasxa saccacxsax
PDF
NISM Series V-A MFD Workbook v December 2024.khhhjtgvwevoypdnew one must use ...
PPTX
TRAINNING, DEVELOPMENT AND APPRAISAL.pptx
PDF
THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO BUILDING PASSIVE INCOME ONLINE
Building a Smart Pet Ecosystem: A Full Introduction to Zhejiang Beijing Techn...
3. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE UNIIT 3^..pptx
Solara Labs: Empowering Health through Innovative Nutraceutical Solutions
Daniels 2024 Inclusive, Sustainable Development
TyAnn Osborn: A Visionary Leader Shaping Corporate Workforce Dynamics
Comments on Crystal Cloud and Energy Star.pdf
sales presentation، Training Overview.pptx
Outsourced Audit & Assurance in USA Why Globus Finanza is Your Trusted Choice
pdfcoffee.com-opt-b1plus-sb-answers.pdfvi
Astra-Investor- business Presentation (1).pptx
Principles of Marketing, Industrial, Consumers,
NEW - FEES STRUCTURES (01-july-2024).pdf
Keppel_Proposed Divestment of M1 Limited
Charisse Litchman: A Maverick Making Neurological Care More Accessible
Ôn tập tiếng anh trong kinh doanh nâng cao
Sales & Distribution Management , LOGISTICS, Distribution, Sales Managers
svnfcksanfskjcsnvvjknsnvsdscnsncxasxa saccacxsax
NISM Series V-A MFD Workbook v December 2024.khhhjtgvwevoypdnew one must use ...
TRAINNING, DEVELOPMENT AND APPRAISAL.pptx
THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO BUILDING PASSIVE INCOME ONLINE

Introduction to Lean NHS

  • 1. Short introduction to Lean for NHS Trusts Revised March 08
  • 2. - 2 - Confidential not to be used without consent Agenda • Introductions • Introduction to Lean and History • Main Concept of Lean: Value Stream Mapping • Main Concept of Lean: 5S • Main Concepts of Lean: 7 Waste • Waste Walk
  • 3. - 3 - Confidential not to be used without consent What is Lean • Focus on Value from a Customer (Patient) point of view on every step of process • Obsession on removing waste within the ‘whole system’ • Bottom up approach in identifying value and waste – assumption that much of waste and value is hidden • A true lean system would “flow” and need little command and control Leads to sustainable change ingrained in the ‘DNA’ of an organisation
  • 4. - 4 - Confidential not to be used without consent Lean approach is significantly different from traditional approaches to change Other approaches • Resources focus on meeting Goal setting/meeting Targets & assurance • Educate people to work their specific job smarter • Have a leader that drives change – hope other follow • Command and Control People to ensure delivery – aim to hit target • Batch and Queue – maximise ‘efficiency’, use overheads to manage • Flavour of the year change initiative • Resources focus on meeting Goal setting/meeting Targets & assurance • Educate people to work their specific job smarter • Have a leader that drives change – hope other follow • Command and Control People to ensure delivery – aim to hit target • Batch and Queue – maximise ‘efficiency’, use overheads to manage • Flavour of the year change initiative Lean Approach • Resources focused on understand the value and value stream for your ‘products’ – focus on removing waste • Educate people to make the system flow faster • Aim for all team members to be leaders and followers • Intrinsically trust your people to deliver – beyond expected results • Aim for one piece flow – maximise ‘effectiveness’ , eliminate overheads • Obsession with continuous improvement • Resources focused on understand the value and value stream for your ‘products’ – focus on removing waste • Educate people to make the system flow faster • Aim for all team members to be leaders and followers • Intrinsically trust your people to deliver – beyond expected results • Aim for one piece flow – maximise ‘effectiveness’ , eliminate overheads • Obsession with continuous improvement
  • 5. - 5 - Confidential not to be used without consent Increasingly Complex Vehicles and Diverse Market Postwar Boom (Mass ideas cemented in) Emphasis on Finance and Accounting “Catch up with US” TOYOTA PRODUCTION SYSTEM • Small Market • Few Resources • Need Cash • Lousy Quality 1st Oil Shock Continuous Improvement Fantastic Success! Deming and Juran “Quality” “Taichi Ohno” Continuous Flow Supermarket ‘Pull systems’ 1945 2008 TOYOTA 1973 Big 3 Market Losses and mergers Relentless Continuous Improvement GM Large-Lot Production Automation Top Down Restructuring/ Downsizing Market Expansion • Every increasing market • Vast Resources • Infrastructure 1990 Top Down ‘Lean’ The Origins of Lean: Mass production failed to adapt to change - lean manufacturing emerged as the alternative
  • 6. - 6 - Confidential not to be used without consent Benefits of Lean • Long term sustainable improvement – Not a short term ‘financial fix’ – Financial results often surpass expected • Relatively low investment – No costly assets/infrastructure – No over reliance on external consultants – Low investment of new technologies – Waste elimination drives financial benefits for investment • Straightforward principles and concepts – Not a complex management fad understood by a few • Tried and Tested – It works! Improves quality of services and patient safety – Every patient matters
  • 7. - 7 - Confidential not to be used without consent The benefits of applying lean for over 40 years is clear for Toyota Global Car Companies Compared ToyotaToyota Sales (volume) 8.2m8.2m Sales (£bn) 176176 Profit (£bn) 12.512.5 Market Values (£bn) 208208 Workforce 285,000285,000 GMGM 8.3m8.3m 192192 -10.9-10.9 2020 335,000335,000 Daimler/Chrsyler*Daimler/Chrsyler* 4.8m4.8m 185185 -1.7*-1.7* 6565 382,000382,000 FordFord 6.6m6.6m 153153 -12.7*-12.7* 1616 300,000300,000 VolkswagenVolkswagen 5.2m5.2m 118118 5.25.2 4343 344,000344,000 *2006 *Chrysler only) Source: PriceWaterhouseCopers, 2005
  • 8. - 8 - Confidential not to be used without consent Where does Lean Fit in the NHS?Where does Lean Fit in the NHS?
  • 9. - 9 - Confidential not to be used without consent Productivity in the NHS has not improved since 1995, in fact has got worse since 2001 Source ONS • “For hospital and community health services, the rise in staff and purchased goods and services has outpaced the rise in activity, whether or not the index includes a quality adjustment*” - ONS • Output increases were mainly due to activity, primary care consultations, drug use, rise in quality of health care. • Input costs were mainly of labour costs, use of non NHS resources and purchased goods – 67% increase input in volume or resources from 1995 to 2006 – 2006 (89.7Billion, 7.5% of GDP) * to reflect the higher proportion of patients surviving for more than 30 days after hospital admission. Better use of resources is at the heart of a Lean Transformation
  • 10. - 10 - Confidential not to be used without consent We are in the 3rd Stage of systems changes to the NHS and Lean Transformation Aligns with this From Christine Beesely: Chief Nursing Officer ! LEAN SIT HERE
  • 11. - 11 - Confidential not to be used without consent “Lean’s focus on delivering care is a refreshing antidote to benchmarks, targets and the traditional approach to performance management. The emphasis it puts on looking at the whole system is valuable.” Nigel Edwards, Policy Director, NHS Confederation
  • 12. - 12 - Confidential not to be used without consent Only we can make this happen! “Our success in moving to this next stage of the journey doesn’t just rely on me making the system more flexible and responsive, it also relies on the right response from local leaders across the NHS” David Nicholson NHS Chief Executive Dec 2007
  • 13. - 13 - Confidential not to be used without consent Principles of LeanPrinciples of Lean
  • 14. - 14 - Confidential not to be used without consent Five Key Concepts underpin Lean • Value • Value Stream • Flow • Pull • Perfection FLOW PULL VALUE STREAM VALUE PERFECTION A value stream does not sit in isolation but is part of a bigger system
  • 15. - 15 - Confidential not to be used without consent Five Key Concepts underpin Lean Value •The customer normally defines value •What does the process add that someone is willing to pay for What this means What this means in the NHS •Anything that improves patient care and experience, otherwise it is waste: • Waiting and Delay • Poor Outcome • Adverse incidents • Reprocessing • Customer is normally the patient/GP, but may be other stakeholders (who is the customer?) Waste not only costs Trust money there is a detrimental loss to society
  • 16. - 16 - Confidential not to be used without consent Five Key Concepts underpin Lean Value Stream •The core functions or steps that deliver the value • Considers all steps from start to finish across ALL boundaries What this means What this means in the NHS • For a patient this would normally start from GP visit to a satisfactory conclusion (from a patient point of view) •A Hospital Trust may work on a value stream that defines the GP/primary care as a supplier • Supplier is still part of value stream
  • 17. - 17 - Confidential not to be used without consent Five Key Concepts underpin Lean Flow •The value adding activities must flow without blockages (metaphor of tap water/river) • Blockages are caused by : • Batching • Multiple processes all adding little value • Misalignment of demand versus capacity What this means What this means in the NHS • Adapt processes that flow with demand, have fewer steps/handovers /rework • Areas that stop flow • Multiple referrals • Multiple pathways • Patient Batching • Misunderstanding of demand by time of day/day/month
  • 18. - 18 - Confidential not to be used without consent Discussion Our analysis indicates most queues within the NHS are relatively stable, suggesting that capacity and demand variation are the cause. Silvester & Walley, June 2005
  • 19. - 19 - Confidential not to be used without consent Five Key Concepts underpin Lean Pull • Two ways pull can be applied • Working on actual demand (assuming no capacity constraints) • Pulling the whole process by using the bottleneck process as a signal What this means What this means in the NHS •Understand whether processes can be • pulled by patient (e.g. walk in STD/Blood Test) • Signalled by bottleneck (Empty beds drive a process of pulling the next patient)
  • 20. - 20 - Confidential not to be used without consent Five Key Concepts underpin Lean Perfection • Continuously improve the process in light of • Value as defined by Customer • Best practise/experimental learning • Resource opportunities/constra ints • Value Streams interactions • Innovation What this means What this means in the NHS •Teams that • Do the Work • Improve the work! • Establishing a drum beat of continuous review e.g. that works on a daily/weekly/monthly cycle Perfection is the aim that is never reached
  • 21. - 21 - Confidential not to be used without consent Overview of Lean ConceptsOverview of Lean Concepts
  • 22. - 22 - Confidential not to be used without consent Value Stream MappingValue Stream Mapping
  • 23. - 23 - Confidential not to be used without consent Traditional Process Improvement versus Lean Process Improvement • Calculating journey times and identifying bottlenecks • Focus on activity levels at each step • Look at activity steps as a whole rather then product specific • Aim to ‘push’ things through faster Traditional Process Mapping • Start with Takt time (how often is 1 created/needed) • Focus on Waste, Rework, Scrap, Set up time at each step • Align Cycle Time to Takt Time • Product flows measured individually • Obsession with measuring cycle time to takt time Lean
  • 24. - 24 - Confidential not to be used without consent Value Stream Mapping can be carried out in all environment – including administration Example Insurance Company Value Stream for claims Register CT-4hrs  6.5  7 hrs RW 5% TAKT 11s Open post, collate, scan & log, policy no. issue Scan 380 CT-0.25 hrs  72  7 hrs RW 20% TAKT 11s Load, IFA#, MLA, Missing Info check, Premium calc CT- 120 hrs  20  7 hrs RW 5% TAKT 11s Review info, medical reports, allocate rating etc Underwrite CT- 0.1 hrs  5  7 hrs RW 5% TAKT 11s Advise acceptance and issue policy P & P Daily post 24 hrs2 hrs CT- 0.20 hrs  13  7 hrs RW 5% TAKT 11s Advise acceptance confirm dates & QC Acceptance 96 hrs 48 hrs 24 hrs 4 hrs 0.25hrs 120 hrs 0.2 hrs 0.1 hrs 304 1417 435 380 Customer Customer Work Manager Daily Task Allocation Process CT=124.55 hrs Total cycle Time = 318.55 hrs Lead time = 45.5 days
  • 25. - 25 - Confidential not to be used without consent Lean concepts: 5SLean concepts: 5S
  • 26. - 26 - Confidential not to be used without consent What Are The 5Ss? Sort Stabilise Shine Standardise Sustain Organisation Orderliness Cleanliness Adherence Self-discipline 5S is a process and method for creating and maintaining an organized, clean, high-performance workplace
  • 27. - 27 - Confidential not to be used without consent SortSort
  • 28. - 28 - Confidential not to be used without consent Sort In most organisations physical and information items are collected and never disposed/put away long after they are required on ‘value add’ activities The continous moving, counting, storing all create waste and interupt flow
  • 29. - 29 - Confidential not to be used without consent Sort - Benefits • Frees up space • Removes clutter/obstacles • Stops people adding to it • Stops hoarding • Improves safety • Controls what is in an area • Feeds into the Stabilise process
  • 30. - 30 - Confidential not to be used without consent Sort - Red Tagging • Obsolete, unneeded? • Stored here, used elsewhere? • Used infrequently? • What is this used for? • What do we need ? • What do we not need ? • What can we remove ? A visible way to identify items that are not needed or are in the wrong place
  • 31. Feb 2002 Medical records : university hospitals of Morecambe bay
  • 32. - 32 - Confidential not to be used without consent Sort (Organise) Distinguish Between What Is And Is Not Needed
  • 33. - 33 - Confidential not to be used without consent StabiliseStabilise
  • 34. - 34 - Confidential not to be used without consent Stabilise Employees who work in cluttered and untidy factories think that searching for equipment and paperwork is a normal part of their job. "A Place For Everything and Everything In Its Place"
  • 35. - 35 - Confidential not to be used without consent Stabilise (Orderliness) • Stabilise ensures that there is a place for everything and that everything is in it’s place. • Determine the best location for all necessary items. • Determine how many of each item will be stored in a given location and set limits on the space allocated. • Locate items in racks, containers, shadow, boards • Increase job efficiency by making it easy for anyone to find, use, and return items. • Organise things in a orderly and tidy manner and place things close to the point of use
  • 36. - 36 - Confidential not to be used without consent Stabilise
  • 37. - 37 - Confidential not to be used without consent ShineShine
  • 38. - 38 - Confidential not to be used without consent Shine •A dirty workplace is often tolerated – however it often hides underlying problems within processes. •In a clean environment dirt can easily be viewed (for example spillages, leaks) •In the NHS Shine has the additional benefits to patient safety and perception
  • 39. - 39 - Confidential not to be used without consent Shine (Cleanliness) This relates specifically to cleaning. It means: • Eliminating all forms of contamination • Eliminating dirt, dust, fluids, and other debris to make the work area clean. • Finding ways to keep the workplace clean • Finding ways to keep the workplace clean at all times. For example, eliminate sources of contamination, such as dust. • Adopting cleaning as a form of inspection • Adopting cleaning as a form of inspection. Cleaning exposes abnormal and pre-failure conditions such as oil leaks, excessive corrosion on a lifting point, chips in a cutting tool. • Making cleaning part of everyday work • Making cleaning part of everyday work for all everybody. A clean environment builds pride in the workplace. Keeping the work place clean at all times
  • 40. - 40 - Confidential not to be used without consent Shine - Benefits • Makes problems easier to find • Creates a better working environment • Aids efficiency and reduces accidents • Supports the Standardisation process • Better customer perception
  • 41. - 41 - Confidential not to be used without consent StandardiseStandardise
  • 42. - 42 - Confidential not to be used without consent Standardise (Adherence) 1: Sort (Organise) 2: Stabilise (Orderliness) 3: Shine (Cleanliness) 4: Standardise (Process) 5: Sustain (Self-discipline) Standardise is the Process to maintain and monitor the first three S’s
  • 43. - 43 - Confidential not to be used without consent Standardise (Process) • Workers • Complete Day with equipment in place according to standard • Quarterly Red Tag Sort Exercise • Regular review of Stabilise (order in the workplace) and improvement •Information/Infrastructure • Waste Disposal/Storage Bins exist • Information Board on expected standards to be followed •Audit • Inspection Audit Quarterly and results fedback to team • Auditor could be another department
  • 44. - 44 - Confidential not to be used without consent Standardisation - Benefits • Provides schedule of 5S activities • Ensures deterioration does not occur • Makes first 3S’s a habit • Starts problem solving/improvement activities • Promotes discipline, Sustains the process
  • 45. - 45 - Confidential not to be used without consent SustainSustain
  • 46. - 46 - Confidential not to be used without consent Sustain (Self-Discipline) • Ensure the 5S become the DNA of the organisation • Newcomers are properly trained • Process and procedures are habitual • Benefits are clearly articulated to get ‘buy in’ • Standard is accepted by all Sustain means continual improvement is evident from the regular inspection tours
  • 47. - 47 - Confidential not to be used without consent Sustain Benefits • Establish standards for all to achieve • Leads to improve safety • Maintains a “tour” ready status • Promotes pride and respect in the work place • Basis for improvement activities
  • 48. - 48 - Confidential not to be used without consent In which areas would 5s benefit this Trust?
  • 49. - 49 - Confidential not to be used without consent 7 Wastes7 Wastes
  • 50. - 50 - Confidential not to be used without consent Introduction to 7 Wastes (TBC) • Waste is the symptom that shows leakage of value • They are many dimension of Waste • Learning to identify ‘waste’ helps uncover root causes
  • 51. - 51 - Confidential not to be used without consent Description • Waste is the opposite to value and is any activity which consumes resources but adds no value, it can be categorised into the following traditional seven wastes to which we have added the waste of human potential – Over production – Motion – Transport – Waiting – Processing – Inventory – Defects – Human potential
  • 52. - 52 - Confidential not to be used without consent The Waste of Over Production The production of goods in excess of the requirements • Examples of over production waste are: – Unnecessary follow ups – Repeated questions and information sharing with patient – Repeated Diagnostics – Unneeded consultant to consultant referrals – Overuse of supplies • Effects of over production waste are: – Excessive wait times – Longer end to end journey – Potential procurement of unnecessary equipment – Cost and Inventory of excessive supplies – Frustration to patient/GP
  • 53. - 53 - Confidential not to be used without consent The Waste of Motion Inefficient ergonomics in the workplace resulting in unnecessary motion • Examples of waste of motion are: – Reaching over for equipment/tools – Moving to see work – Excessive stretching bending – Double handling – Walking to and from work centres /areas – Poorly designed work areas • Effects of waste of motion are: – Increased cycle time for operation resulting in overall increase in lead time – Looking for parts / tools out of visual sight – Worker fatigue
  • 54. - 54 - Confidential not to be used without consent The Waste of Transport Inefficient transportation of materials, patients, equipment, etc. • Examples of waste of motion are: – Inefficient transport routes – Delay in waiting for transportation – Complex material/patient flow paths within the work place – Double handling – Ineffective material handling equipment resulting in several journeys • Effects of waste of motion are: – Increased waiting/cycle and overall lead time – Operator fatigue – Opportunity for injury to patient/damage to goods – Poor communication across long distances
  • 55. - 55 - Confidential not to be used without consent The Waste of Waiting Ineffective use of time, where patients/materials are not having value added • Examples of waste of waiting are: – Waiting for appointment/referral – Waiting for material handling equipment to be available – Waiting for patients/work – Watching machines processing – Queuing – Waiting for the answer (support staff) • Effects of waste of waiting are: – Increased Non value added time – Ineffective use of resources – Increased work in progress – Increased cycle times/leadtimes
  • 56. - 56 - Confidential not to be used without consent The Waste of Inventory Inventory in excess of the requirement to make the job and in excess of suitable safety stocks • Examples of unnecessary inventory are: – Excess stock of supplies – Obsolete stock – Patients that have started on the pathway but never complete (long tail) • Effects of unnecessary inventory are: – Supplies/Materials • Increased space • Inventory is a liability. Money could be invested more usefully • Increase chances of obsolescence – Long Tail Patients • Frustration and complaints • Potential for complications • Loss to society • Burden of continual processing of patient information
  • 57. - 57 - Confidential not to be used without consent The Waste of Defects Product manufactured outside the acceptable limits • Examples of defects are: – Scrap of Materials/Supplies – Rework on Patient – Expectation not met/managed – Returns to Trust – Customer complaints • Effects of defects are: – Increased costs – Increased capacity requirements – Requirement for extra materials – Rescheduling of work – Poor delivery performance – Fire fighting
  • 58. - 58 - Confidential not to be used without consent Implementation OverviewImplementation Overview
  • 59. - 59 - Confidential not to be used without consent Some ‘watch outs’ during Implementation • Don’t Assume that Lean equals using the Lean Tools – Lean Tools are only part of the way to get to perfection – the most important tool is genuine desire to improve • Don’t Assume that Rapid Improvement Events is all that’s required with the help of a change manager – Commitment from the Top for sustainability – Provides resources, engagement, change management, stakeholder management • Don’t assume that all resources should be focused on adding customer(patient) value – Stakeholders work the ‘system’, resources need to be aligned to deliver a continuing evolving system that meets all stakeholder expectations, otherwise the system will fail. • No involvement from staff at the ‘coal face’ will mean no engagement – and no sustainability – not matter how good the solution is – Respect People and differences – Work from where you are
  • 60. - 60 - Confidential not to be used without consent A lean program can take for 18 to 36 months before it is sustained – we need to ask key questions at each phase Phase 1 Aligning Lean with Trust Strategy What will work in our environment ? Phase 2 Blueprint for Change Process Pilot Lean foundation Education Phase 3 Roll out future Lean in core areas Lean sustained Phase 4 Executive Education Have we got the Appetite? Resource Management & Benefit Realisation Culture and Behavioural Change for Lean How do we sustain the new way of working? 2-3months 3-6months 12months – 24months Process Audit Drum beat of continuous improvement
  • 61. - 61 - Confidential not to be used without consent Lean is all about people “Plan with the people, Begin with what they have, Build on what they know, Of the best leaders, When the task is accomplished the people all remark We have done it ourselves” Lao Tzu
  • 62. - 62 - Confidential not to be used without consent kinetik solutions limited E:bebetter@kinetik.uk.com W: www.kinetik.uk.com O: (+44)870 1997132 M: (+44)780 3009053