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Understanding and Demonstrating the benefits of improvement

This project aims to understand and quantify the benefits of improvement in the healthcare system, specifically focusing on quality improvement for patients undergoing surgery. The goal is to increase the percentage of patients receiving surgery as a day case from 22% to 50% by April 2010 and assess the impact on their experience. The project also aims to identify and remove waste in the current system, map out a future state, and understand the cost and potential savings of implementing the changes.

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Understanding and Demonstrating the benefits of improvement

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  1. Understanding and Demonstrating the benefits of improvement A work in progress!

  2. Where do you begin? • Quality improvement for the service user • Increase percentage of patients receiving this surgery as a day case from 22% to 50% by April 2010 • What difference does this make for patients?

  3. Ward stay Outpt apt GP referral Adm surgery No test results LOS Adm night pre-surg home TTO variation No surgery Cancelled theatre GP (sick note) Sick note Discharge info Pain meds Understanding and quantifying the waste in the current system Lap chole pathway for 97.9% Ninewells’ patients as inpatients • Waste to be removed: • Repeat outpatient apt • Admission pre-surgery • Cancelled operations • Post-surgery stay • Variation in TTOs • Variation in sick note/discharge info

  4. home Outpt apt GP referral surgery Arrive on day Apt for surgery made TTOs Sicknote Discharge letter Map the future state • Waste removed: • Repeat outpatient apt • Admission pre-surgery • Cancelled operations • Post-surgery stay • Variation in TTOs • Variation in sick note/discharge info Lap chole pathway for 50% post change for Ninewells’ patients as daycase surgery

  5. Collecting information from a patient’s notes to understand the waste • Number of GP apts • When tests were done • Number of outpatient apts (grade of Dr they saw) • Surgery cancelled or not • Length of stay • Any complications whilst in hospital • Discharge letter or not • TTOs – what drugs, length of time • Did they have any complications/re-admissions

  6. Understanding Cost • Cost of GP apt • Cost of outpatient apt • Cost of medics time • Cost of time in ward (overnight stay) • Cost of drugs • ?Admin costs

  7. Summarising the data into cost • Is it possible to produce an estimated range of the cost of the waste in the current process? • Clear time frame that you are quantifying this waste for: is it over 6months? • Things to think about: • range in waste per patient • Variation in waste = variation in cost

  8. Understanding the cost of change • Time for redesign • Cost of staffing time – how many people will be involved in the redesign work? • Parallel processes • Frequently, changing to a new model of service delivery involves running parallel processes for a short period of time • New technology implementation?

  9. Summary– the start of a framework: • Understand the waste in the current pathway • Map out pathway • Determine how much by when – what are you aiming to achieve? By when? • Map out future state • Identify waste that you plan to remove from the pathway from comparing the two pathways

  10. Summary– the start of a framework: • Undertake an audit of a sample of patient notes to collect information about the frequency and variation of waste along the pathway • Use this information to determine some ranges of cost in terms of: • Staff time • Financial Cost • Patient time/experience • Extrapolate your costs based on a specific time period and level of activity, including taking into consideration the impact of the change; will it impact on all patients or a % of them?

  11. Summary– the start of a framework: • Quantify the cost of undertaking the improvement work • Build a project plan • From the plan, estimate the time commitment for all staff involved • Consider any possible costs of running the old and new pathways at the same time: will this happen? How many patients will be going through the old process, how many through the new? For how long? • Quantify the cost of any new equipment/IT developments/staff etc • Compare the cost of undertaking the work with the cost of the waste in the current system

  12. What will be the impact? • Quality improvement? • Direct cash releasing saving? • Increased productivity? • Cost avoidance? • Resource release, e.g staff time? – what will you do with it? • Putting timelines around the savings made through removing the waste, e.g. £x will be saved in y months, £z over £a years.

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