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November
3, 2006
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Internal Medicine Associates:
Learning from Toyota
As
part of the MGH strategic plan, the hospital is piloting a process improvement
strategy developed by automobile manufacturer Toyota. A key component
of the Toyota Production System involves employees noticing what makes
their work difficult and collaborating towards a solution. Often the answer
involves many small changes that cooperatively improve workflow. Recently,
the staff of the Internal Medicine Associates (IMA), an MGH primary care
practice, used the approach to improve its process for handling telephone
messages.
IMA secretaries collectively take up to 1,000 telephone messages a day.
Prior to the process improvement initiative, practice secretaries used
a "free-form" approach, collecting whatever information each
judged to be necessary and writing the message out by hand. Many of the
notes required reworking because they were illegible, lacked information
or were relayed to the wrong person in the practice. Each message required
approximately five minutes to take. Responses to patients often were delayed,
and secretaries were occupied with the time-consuming task.
To address the issue, a small team of IMA staff, including secretaries,
nurses and a physician, collaborated to improve the process. The team
designed a prototype form that prompts the message taker to collect pertinent
information by checking boxes on the form. Once in use, edits were made
to the first version based upon feedback from the secretaries. Each revision
improved and streamlined the message-taking process.
"I spent a lot of time on the telephone handling calls," says
Tracy O'Neill, IMA secretary. "This took my attention away from other
responsibilities that needed to be addressed here in our busy office.
I like this new form. It has definitely simplified our work day."
Using the new message form, secretaries have been able to take messages
more quickly and easily. Notes no longer lack information, and the time
to take a message has been reduced by two minutes per call. Saving two
minutes on each of the 1,000 messages per day has freed the equivalent
of four staff members to attend to other work.
Look for more process improvement success stories in future issues of
MGH Hotline. For more information, call Sally Iles at (617) 726-8283.
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