Press information issued on behalf of:
Amnis Ltd., 3000 Hillswood Drive, Hillswood Business Park, CHERTSEY,
Surrey, KT16 0RS
Web: www.amnis.uk.com
14th July 2009
Healthcare organisations urged: 'Don't give up on 'Lean''
Healthcare organisations - including hospitals - are giving up too soon
on 'Lean' based improvement initiatives, according to specialist
healthcare quality, innovation and productivity improvement enabler,
Amnis.
Amnis' managing director, Mark Eaton, explained: "A number of
improvement initiatives underway in the healthcare sector are based on
the concepts of 'Lean' and 'Lean Sigma' but, like many organisations in
manufacturing where Lean has its origins, there is already evidence
that some healthcare organisations are giving up on these initiatives
before they realise real results or are simply changing processes and
doing nothing to change the underlying culture and behaviours."
According to Eaton - author of the book 'Lean for practitioners' - the
top five reasons why this happens are:
1. Lean is not a Board issue but, instead, is launched at divisional or
even individual department level. This leads rapidly to fragmentation
of activity and dissipation of effort.
2. Not ensuring that the productivity improvements expected through
Lean are aligned with the organisation's objectives. This leads to Lean
being 'out prioritised' by other activities and put on hold and, once
it is on hold, it is one step from being mothballed.
3. Not building on previous experience. This is where Lean tries to
undo all of the good things that have gone on - and are currently going
on - and this builds resentment from frontline teams.
4. Building reliance on external consultancies or agencies. Building
internal capability and, even more importantly, involving a healthcare
organisation's frontline teams, is the only way to get Lean out of the
textbook and into the clinic.
5. Many organisations simply give up when they encounter problems,
resistance or changing priorities because they have not built up the
resilience that is needed to get through the initial period of
turbulence.
"Starting out by treating Lean as a Board level issue, approaching it
in a flexible manner and recognising the difference between changing
processes and changing behaviours are the keys to long-term success,"
said Eaton.
To help organisations to understand how Lean helps drive improvements
in quality, innovation and productivity, Amnis runs a number of
workshops for executives and front-line teams - including its
Accelerated Lean Skills Programme.
In partnership with the Institute of Operations Management, Amnis is
running an 'open' version of this programme from 8th to 10th September
2009. For more information, contact Amnis at
info@amnis.uk.com or call 0870
446 1002.
End
About 'Lean' and 'Lean Sigma'
Six Sigma is a business management strategy, initially implemented by
Motorola, which enjoys widespread application in many sectors of
industry.
Six Sigma seeks to improve the quality of process outputs by
identifying and removing the causes of defects (errors) and variation
in manufacturing and business processes. It uses a set of quality
management methods, including statistical methods, and creates a
special infrastructure of people within the organisation who are
experts in these methods. Each Six Sigma project carried out within an
organisation follows a defined sequence of steps and has quantified
financial targets (cost reduction or profit increase).
Lean Sigma incorporates the speed and impact of 'lean' with the quality
and variation control of Six Sigma.
Coined by Jim Womack's research team at MIT in the 1990s, 'Lean' means
doing more with less. The core idea behind 'Lean' is to maximise
customer value while minimising waste. A Lean organisation understands
customer value and focuses its key processes to continually meet those
needs.
About Amnis Limited
Working with both public and private sector organisations, Amnis is a
consultancy which specialises in quality, innovation and productivity
improvement, helping clients plan and deploy strategies for successful
transformation. Its goal is to help clients not only deliver
sustainable change but also to develop their capability to tackle their
next challenges.
Providing both consultancy and training services, Amnis' team includes
specialists in Lean/Six Sigma, organisational development, strategic
planning, change management and systems thinking.
Further information from:
Mark Eaton, Amnis, 00 44 (0) 870 446 1002;
markeaton@amnis.uk.com
Bob
Little, Bob Little Press & PR, 00 44 (0)1727 860405;
bob.little@boblittlepr.com