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Starting the First Surgical Case on Time to Cut Delays
B In 2006, the board, administration and staff at Louisiana’s Thibodaux Regional Medical Center (TRMC) decided their operating room (OR) suites represented an opportunity for improvement. Rising demand, costs and competition were all signals that the hospital would need to either invest in expansion or operational efficiency. Taking the less glamorous and more difficult path of improving efficiency, the team employed a combination of Lean, Six Sigma, modeling and Change Acceleration Process. One aspect of the initiative would be to increase on-time first-case starts. When the first surgical case of the day starts late, it delays subsequent cases, causing bottlenecks and frustrating patients, surgeons and staff. To tackle this issue, a multi-disciplinary team was formed consisting of surgeons, OR nurses, certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs), anesthesiologists, administration, scrub technicians, OR transporters, ambulatory care unit (ACU) nurses, Master Black Belts, an OR scheduler and IT representatives. TRMC benefits from strong leadership and a longstanding commitment to performance improvement – advantages that proved instrumental in guiding the overall success of the OR initiative. The team had to find out why the hospital’s first surgical cases of the day were below expectations – only 40 percent were meeting the 7:30 a.m. cut time. Figure 1 shows the average first-case delay by service line. First cases averaged a 15-minute delay.
Further investigation identified that physicians were responsible for driving the behavior that shortened delays in specific services. Through data analysis, interviews, process mapping, brainstorming and patient flow modeling, the team identified the following improvement opportunities:
Approximately 38 percent of surgery patients scheduled and completed pre-admit testing prior to the day of surgery. Therefore, up to 62 percent of first-case patients were at risk of experiencing a delayed or cancelled surgery due to lack of preparation. Clarifying Roles and ResponsibilitiesObservation showed that processes, roles, responsibilities and definitions to support first cases varied among the staff. There were also different views as to what constituted an on-time first-case starts. Figure 2 shows the process steps that must be executed prior to an OR first-case start.
The PAT team validates that all patient data is complete, including lab, imaging, cardiology and other results, and that information is transferred to acute care. A fax form was modified to notify the surgeon of abnormal results. A standardized method was developed to communicate concurrence and further testing. Failed communications can delay or cancel the first-case start. Even with a committed staff, communication drops were observed during the analysis phase of the project that resulted in first-case delays. TRMC had an active OR committee, but through this project they rose to an even higher level. The OR committee leader (also a surgeon) helped to enforce policies, support the team’s decisions and deal with difficult issues. Measuring and Sharing ResultsAccurate measurement is essential to process improvement. The TRMC standard for on-time first-case starts was a 7:30 a.m. cut time. There was minimal visibility, however, to actual performance by staff and surgeons. Since the project produced clear definitions and daily result postings, TRMC has shown a 58 percent improvement.
Education also contributes to project success. Special breakfast and lunch sessions helped to build relationships and educate the physician office staff. Information was shared regarding improvements, expectations, new definitions and policy changes. Among the anticipated benefits from the project were increased operational efficiency, delighted patients, satisfied surgeons, empowered staff, a more predictable OR schedule, the potential for subsequent OR cases starting on time and fewer patient flow bottlenecks. To drive significant change, the team set a target of 100 percent for on-time first-case starts. Two simple, “quick hit” solutions were implemented:
The hospital’s policy defined a first-case start as a 7:30 a.m. cut time with a 7:15 a.m. induction time. Some staff and surgeons believed it was a 7:15 a.m. cut time, which caused variability in arrival times, disconnects in patient prep times, and dissatisfied surgeons feeling the impact of an extended wait time. Implementing a 7 a.m. induction time led to a re-alignment of arrival times to ensure the OR is setup, patient is prepped, drugs and medicines are ready, the surgeon is in house, and the patient is asleep. It is the responsibility of the surgeon to mark their arrival on the OR board or inform the OR flow coordinator to signal approval to start induction by 7 a.m. Implementing ChangesNew policies were communicated and a two-week pilot was conducted to adjust arrival patterns. Letters were sent notifying surgeons of their success or failure at achieving the target. Following the pilot, the changes went into effect. Daily dashboards, with team-member (RN, CRNA, surgeon) names, time metrics and delay reasons were posted. Table 2 is a sample of the dashboard (with names removed) that is posted for staff and surgeons.
Delay codes were revamped to clearly identify roles, responsibilities and processes. The nursing staff was educated on the urgency of using the delay codes for any cases inducing after 7 a.m. Daily and weekly dashboards were posted to share the success with the team. The quality team owns collecting delay codes and publishing a weekly on-time first-case dashboard that is distributed and posted in the OR lounge. OR Committee Approves and Enforces PolicyThe physician leader was key in winning the buy-in and implementation by the OR staff, project team and OR committee. The OR committee approved and published an on-time first-case policy with the following highlights:
After each late first-case start due to a surgeon, a letter is sent notifying the surgeon of their delay. Surgeons are encouraged to provide a response to the OR committee refuting or explaining the violation. Clear performance metrics are reviewed by the OR committee, which takes actions as outlined in the policy. A report is provided to the chief of anesthesiology highlighting anesthesia late starts. This allows the chief to address the issue directly with individual CRNAs. Performance ResultsPrior to the project, 40 percent of cases had a 7:30 a.m. cut time. Nine months later, the improvements have been sustained (Table 3). Currently, 98 percent of first cases have cut time by 7:30 a.m., with an average cut time of 7:10 a.m. Surgeons and patients experience less wait time and cancellations. The current policy provides better allocation of first cases to all surgeons.
About the Authors: Monte Parker is a consulting manager with GE Healthcare Performance Solutions; he can be reached at monte.parker@ge.com. Rebecca Hattle is a senior consultant with GE Healthcare; she can be reached at rebecca.hattle@ge.com. Darcy Prejeant is a Master Black Belt at Louisiana's Thibodaux Regional Medical Center; she can be reached at darcy.prejeant@thibodaux.com. Greg Stock is CEO and president of TRMC; he can be reached at greg.stock@thibodaux.com. Reproduction Without Permission Is Strictly Prohibited Copyright Requests Publish an Article: Do you have a Six Sigma tip, learning or case study? Share it with the largest community of Six Sigma professionals, and be recognized by your peers. It's a great way to promote your expertise and/or build your resume. Read more about submitting an article. Download the iSixSigma Toolbar for 1-Click access. Search Your Way. Everyday. Without Delay.
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