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The Definitive Guide to Emergency Department Operational Improvement (Crane, MD, MBA, Jody / Noon, PhD, Chuck)
The Definitive Guide to Emergency Department Operational Improvement
Untertitel Employing Lean Principles with Current ED Best Practices to Create the "No Wait" Department
Autor Crane, MD, MBA, Jody / Noon, PhD, Chuck
Verlag Taylor and Francis
Co-Verlag Productivity Press (Imprint/Brand)
Sprache Englisch
Einband Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
Erscheinungsjahr 2011
Seiten 353 S.
Artikelnummer 7318496
ISBN 978-1-4398-0840-5
CHF 156.00
Zusammenfassung
In a unique and integrated approach, The Definitive Guide to Emergency Department Operational Improvement: Employing Lean Principles with Current ED Best Practices to Create the "No Wait" Department exposes you to the academics behind managing the complex service environment that is the ED. The book combines applied management science and ED experience to create a model of how to improve your emergency department operations. After summarizing the current state of emergency medicine, the book offers an in-depth presentation of Lean tools used in the ED along with basic and advanced flow principles grounded in queuing theory and the theory of constraints. It then shows how these concepts are applied in the emergency department and why they work, supported by a comprehensive case study in which Lean principles were used to transform an underperforming ED into a world-class operation. The authors highlight three commonly referenced intervals in the ED: door to doc (input), doc to disposition (throughput), and disposition to departure (output). After reviewing best practices, the authors explain how to achieve excellence in your own environment by discussing change management, leadership, dealing with resistance, and other critical elements of creating a culture of change. Under any scenario realized by healthcare reform, this book provides the tools and concepts to improve your ED for patients, staff, the organization, and ultimately, society.

"Emergency departments were never designed to be the walk-in clinics they have become; yet with so many having nowhere else to turn for care, they have become cauldrons of resentment in which neither the best needs of patient or hospital are served. Offering a solution to this fiscal and medical madness, this step-by-step guide shows how the application of lean principles can lead to more efficient, cost-effective, and patient friendly departments. It brings together leading experts who demonstrate the unique application of lean tools and concepts to hospital operations and looks at those hospitals that have put this innovative approach into action"--Provided by publisher.

? for practical reasons there is value in translating TPS to the healthcare arena. Jody Crane and Chuck Noon do this well, providing meaty examples and a level of technical depth that go beyond other Lean healthcare books that I have seen.-Jeffrey K. Liker, Professor of Industrial and Operations Engineering, University of Michigan, and Shingo Prize-Winning Author of The Toyota Way ? this book will help you and your leadership team create a culture where 'a community of scientists' continually improves and better serves patient, hospital, and societal needs- improving quality while simultaneously reducing cost.-Mark Graban, MS, MBA, Shingo Prize-Winning Author of Lean Hospitals: Improving Quality, Patient Safety, and Employee Satisfaction ? will open your eyes to cutting-edge concepts that drive ED operations?-Maureen Bisognano, President and CEO, Institute for Healthcare Improvement
About the Authors: Joseph T. Crane, MD, MBA is one of the nation's leading experts in emergency department (ED) operations. He is an emergency physician practicing at Mary Washington Hospital in Fredericksburg, Virginia. In addition to his clinical responsibilities, from 2002 to 2009, he served as the business director of his group, Fredericksburg Emergency Medical Alliance. In 2004, he graduated from the Physician Executive MBA Program (PEMBA) at the University of Tennessee, where he is currently an adjunct professor teaching physician-led operations improvement. Dr. Crane's work focuses on innovative approaches to ED and hospital-wide operational and patient flow improvement, specifically addressing the application of Lean manufacturing concepts within the healthcare environment. He also specializes in leadership and change management for operational and clinical improvement. Dr. Crane is an emergency medicine faculty member of The Institute for Healthcare Improvement. His company, X32 Healthcare, teaches and consults with organizations on process improvement using Lean applications. Through these engagements, Dr. Crane has worked with hundreds of EDs from around the world on adopting innovations in the delivery of emergency care. He has taught and worked in a wide variety of settings in the United States, Canada, Europe, South America, and the Middle East, including courses or sessions at The University of Tennessee, The University of Kansas, George Mason University, and Harvard University. Charles E. Noon, PhD is a professor of management science in the College of Business at the University of Tennessee. He is a founding member of the highly ranked Physician Executive MBA Program and continues to teach in the program. He holds a PhD in industrial and operations engineering from the University of Michigan. His teaching interests include operational improvement, business modeling, simulation, and decision analysis and support. His applied research concerns computer-based models and process improvement, and his papers in these areas have appeared in Interfaces, Journal of Healthcare Management, and Networks and Spatial Analysis. Dr. Noon also teaches in the full-time MBA program, the Management Science PhD program, and various nondegree executive education programs, including a new offering entitled Lean for Healthcare. He is the recipient of numerous teaching awards and serves as a teaching mentor for junior faculty. To stay current, he periodically consults with hospitals on process improvement, capacity planning, and staff scheduling.