AccidentalLean ReflectionsonOperationsStrategy

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Accidental lean: Performance improvement in an NHS hospital and


reflections on the role of operations strategy

Chapter · January 2015

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Accidental Lean - Performance improvement in an NHS

hospital and reflections on the role of Operations Strategy

Introduction

This chapter reviews a management consultancy intervention at a Wing of a Northern

Hospital (NH) where the consultants were engaged to execute a performance improvement

project to train the general public how to behave more responsibly in a hospital with regard

to hospital acquired infections (HAI) such as MRSA1. The Strategic Health Authority (NHSA)

commissioned the work because the Northern Hospital (NH) had among the highest rates of

infection in the region, falling far short of Department of Health targets regarding HAI. The

chapter’s contribution to Service Operations Management and the study of healthcare is to

consider the implications of piecemeal improvement programmes and reflect on whether a

more studied approach towards operational performance objectives, developing an

Operations Strategy, might result in behavioural and performance step-change

improvement.

The work belongs within an existing body of research on performance improvement in

Healthcare, much of which discusses the application of tools and techniques deriving from

the Toyota Production System (TPS) collectively known as Lean (Krafcik 1988). A brief

comparison is made between the case and other research before reflecting on service

delivery and performance within the UK’s National Health Service (NHS). Consideration is

given as to whether the use of an Operations Strategy, another manufacturing-derived

approach, could help the NHS have greater success in achieving its objective of using

resources to best effect to deliver improved patient care (NHS_Plan 2000). Typically, an

operations strategy provides the broader conceptualisation of service delivery and ‘value’

1
MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus): a bacterial infection resistant to many widely-used
antibiotics. It spreads in crowded environments where there is frequent skin-to-skin contact, making it more
common in people who are in hospital or nursing homes.
creating organisational knowledge and enabling planning to reconcile market requirements

and resources (Slack and Lewis 2011). The purpose of this chapter is to reflect on that

reconciliation, or its absence, in the NHS in conjunction with the concept of ‘patient value’, a

key priority area for health policy (Currie et al. 2008) and a driver of the consulting

intervention described.

Healthcare is perhaps the most personal and important service people experience. It is also

a service people need but do not necessarily want (Berry and Bendapudi 2007). Patient

perceptions of safety and care are what make up the ‘patient experience’, something that

transcends a purely medical perspective. Unlike other services where demand increases

supply, in healthcare supply increases demand. More physicians or hospital beds in a given

region translate into more medical services rendered on a per capita basis without

necessarily improving the overall health status of that population group (ibid).

Service quality is an approach to achieving better health outcomes, with both quality and

value determined by the beneficiary, and has become an important corporate strategy for

healthcare organizations. Groonroos (2007) suggests there are two distinct components to

quality, the technical aspect, or what is provided, and the functional aspect, or how the

service is provided. It is the functional aspect that patients perceive and receive. Patient

satisfaction therefore demands consideration of both the service concept and the customer

characteristic (Anderson et al. 2008).

The NHS Context Leading to the Consulting Intervention

“Infections are the price we pay for advances in medicine which allow survival in patients

who are unlikely to have survived their illness a few years ago” (Department of Health 2006).

At its inception in 1948 it was assumed that quality would be inherent in the service offering

of the newly formed National Health Service (NHS) through the skills and ethos of the health

professionals working within the system (Nicholls et al. 2000). The culture of the

2
organisation has been historically based upon clinical excellence and the assumed

leadership of clinicians. Since the introduction of the “internal market”, numerous changes

have occurred, including those of staff attitudes and perceptions, culture, patient

expectations, and medical technology (Burgess and Radnor 2012, Graban and Swartz

2012).

In the NHS, quality is seen as a “prevailing purpose”, having become a statutory requirement

in 1997, incorporating the principles of corporate governance and applying these for the first

time to quality and clinical governance (Cullen et al. 2000). The NHS Plan (2000) specified

that funding was linked to modernisation. Implicit was an acknowledgement that in order to

deliver the aims of the clinical governance agenda the culture of health care organisations

needed to be changed (Waring and Bishop 2010, Graban et al. 2012). A ‘patient-led’

perspective does not challenge clinical excellence but suggests a better balance be struck

between the perceived ‘value’ of clinical safety and care and the perceived ‘value’ of more

general patient safety and care.

This has made healthcare a fast-mover in policy reform although change is beset with

professional and policy constraints, burdened by a mosaic of professions, large-scale

structural change and the presence of central targets (Currie and Lockett 2011). Structural

change in the NHS is framed by an increasingly prescriptive and centrally-driven set of

performance measures (Currie and Suhomlinova 2006) and makes radical change within a

culture such as the NHS problematic (Esain et al. 2008, Radnor and Osborne 2013).

Consequently most initiatives within Hospitals and within the NHS in general tend to follow

the path of incremental change and improvement rather than breakthrough (Ritchie 2002:4,

Umble and Umble 2006). Choosing the tools and deciding the degree of emphasis in order

to maximise the potential benefits and outputs of an action is difficult. It requires knowledge

and planning. The former is not always easy to harness in a large organisation, and the

latter, to be done properly, requires time, a sometimes rare commodity (Ritchie 2002:4).

3
A number of consulting projects have been carried out across UK hospitals, conforming in

the main to Ritchie’s contention, and increasingly choosing the ‘business’ tools of quality and

continuous improvement such as Kaizen and Lean (Antony et al. 2007, Patwardhan and

Patwardhan 2008, Boaden 2009;), alongside the adoption of the models of performance

management (Smith 2002). Probably the most famous UK example is Gerry Robinson’s

televised improvement intervention at Rotherham General Hospital in 2006 (Towill 2009).

Burgess (2012) provides comprehensive coverage of such improvement projects. Given the

already stated objective of operations strategy as the conceptualisation of service delivery

and organisational knowledge so that market needs can be effectively met, consideration of

the multiple Lean interventions across the NHS raises a number of questions. The most

obvious one is why are there so many interventions? Also, what lessons are learned from

each one? How are, or indeed are, these lessons disseminated throughout the NHS? Are

they used to encourage systematic learning, performance improvement and consistent

service delivery, to leave quality deposits, as advocated by Dale et al. (2002)?

The Operational Context for the Management Consultants at Northern Hospital (NH)

While professionals and patients may define quality in different ways, Hospital Acquired

Infections (HAI), especially MRSA have become synonymous in the public eye with poor

quality service. Centrally-collated DoH statistics (2006) show that MRSA occurs in the main

outside hospitals, and in fact people come to hospitals to be cured of it. As a response, the

DoH ‘ring-fenced’ funding in order to address specific hygiene issues within limited

timescales. DoH targets surrounding infection control have a temporary impact and help to

focus the minds of both clinical and non-clinical management for short periods of relatively

intense self-examination, although Boaden (2009) suggests they are not always effectively

embedded.

Arising from the obligation to comply with specific Department of Health demands regarding

MRSA, and in an attempt to effectively embed improvement, the Northern Strategic Health

4
Authority (NSHA) undertook to review the specific approaches to reducing MRSA infection

rates at the Northern Hospital (NH), which had among the highest rates of infection in the

region. The NSHA saw patients and the public as implementers of change, and in looking

for a practical, systematic, long-term sustainable solution, saw ‘some form’ of social

marketing as the best way to proceed. Budget allocations were set aside to address service

improvement objectives within NH, a Steering Group was set up, a broad engagement

process scoped out, and an initial project plan developed. As such, the remit of this project

differed from typical improvement projects in that although its orientation was primarily within

patient care, the initial impetus was process improvement in the public through social

marketing techniques. It was hoped performance improvement within the Wards would

follow. Despite beginning with the public, at the project’s core lay the idea of ‘sustainable

patient value’, ensuring that the whole focus and energy of the Hospital was placed behind

meeting the needs of the various audiences served – hospital staff, Health Management,

patients and the wider public - so that the Hospital could be seen to have met its

organisational quality and performance imperatives.

The Approach Taken by the Management Consultants at Northern Hospital (NH)

Against this backdrop the Northern Strategic Health Authority (NSHA) secured additional

funding for social marketing support, intended to assist NH to meet its immediate objective of

reducing MRSA infection rates. The NSHA believed that the best possible outcomes would

be realised using a social marketing approach, whose purpose is to achieve specific

behavioural goals for a social good. Its primary focus is on “benefiting the target audience

and general society” not the marketer (Andreasen and Kotler 2003:329). The NHSA

believed if the behaviour and perceptions of external groups (patients and public) were

understood, internal behaviours could be informed and developed accordingly. This is

perhaps a counterintuitive view of how an organisation should plan its services.

5
To this end, a specialist change management consulting firm was hired to implement best

practice approaches to social marketing to encourage patients and the public to behave

differently. An initial Review Phase was the first step in the programme.

The Review Phase

‘Review’ was based on a preliminary assessment of the Hospital’s original proposed action

plan. Its focus was to assess the extent of existing knowledge of MRSA and the actions

required to control infection rates. A combination of data collection techniques was used.

Partly this was to effect data triangulation, and partly because the target population varied in

profile and accessibility. Survey and group discussions were employed for all the internal

and external stakeholder groups. Internal stakeholder groups were Hospital management,

clinical management, nursing, clinical and support staff. External Stakeholders were the

patients and wider public. To strengthen generalisability the selection sample of individuals

from a number of groupings was random: members of ward staff, four patient groups and

seven employee groups:

Medical Theatre Matrons Porters

Ward 29 Phlebotomy Renal

Individual interviews, were conducted face-to-face or over the telephone, lasting around 45

minutes. The questions asked are shown in Figure 1.

1 What do you think is the current public perception of MRSA infections?


2 How do you think that means that patients feel when they enter hospital?
3 What actions do you and your colleagues take at present to address these feelings?
4 What could you do in the future to ensure patients feel more reassured about the real causes
and likelihood of infections?
5 What could you do in the future to reduce the causes and likelihood of MRSA infections?
6 Where such initiatives have been tried / are in place, what stops them being adopted on an
organisational-wide and sustainable basis?
7 How many of these initiatives have already been tried in the past and/or are currently in place in
some areas?
8 How could these changes be made to work and to stick on a long-term basis?
Figure 1: The interview questions

6
For external stakeholders, four focus group sessions of 90 minutes each were held. The

same questions were asked as in the staff sessions, re-worded for relevance. Participants

were recruited against the following criteria:

 Mix of males and females in each group

 MRSA Involved Group

 definition:

o have had a close friend or relative involved in an MRSA ‘episode’

within the past 24 months

o have visited, for any medical reason (self/other), NH within the

past 24 months

 Non-MRSA Group

 definition:

o have visited, for any medical reason (self/other), NH within the

past 24 months

o aware of MRSA

All respondents within the consultation were broadly conversant with the challenges facing

the NHS in its battle against HAI, and their profiles are shown in Figure 2.

MRSA involved groups Non-MRSA groups

Wednesday 28 November 25-44, C2D 25-44, C2D

Thursday 29 November 45+, C2D 45+, C2D

Figure 2: Age and Socio-Economic Profile of Focus Group Respondents

Findings from the Review Phase

Employees showed an underlying commitment to care and awareness of the wider cultural

and organisational issues:

7
“We’ve all lost the focus of why we’re here” (Nurse)

“‘The focus needs to shift to good practice rather than targets” (Matron)

“We don’t work well as a team at an organisational level”(Nurse).

Staff focus was strongly on quality, performance improvement and cultural change. The

recurring theme was the requirement for greater clarity and consistency of leadership across

the organisation. Accountability and silo working were raised as issues, both identified by

Klein (2010) as areas to be addressed across the NHS. Encouraging people to work

together in multi-disciplinary teams toward a common patient-centred goal was identified as

necessary – something already practised to good effect in the Mayo Clinic (Berry 2004).

The public surveys highlighted inconsistency of service delivery, with puzzlement that an

organisation could get things right and ‘quite so wrong’ at the same time. Some saw

politicians as the root of all evil, but generally the buck came back to the Hospital’s senior

management. Doctors and nurses were largely exempt from being responsible for any

professional shortcomings:

‘It’s a shame they can’t they give proper support to the nurses and free them up to do what

they do best, which is to care for the sick’ (Member of the public)

‘I wouldn’t want to work in those conditions. How can they think it’s OK to carry on like this in

the 21st century?’ (Member of the public)

Patient and public focus was on service delivery and outcome (Groonroos’s (2007)

functional and technical quality). The assessment from the Review Phase indicated that

internal issues were greater than the intended process improvements with the public. An

internal change programme was recognised as vital to engender performance improvement

and cultural change to create an improvement in overall service quality. Consequently,

social marketing was removed from the project remit.

8
The Internal Change Programme

Four phases, Engage, Embed, Energise and Evaluate, referred to as the ‘4Es’ were

proposed, each with a specific thrust of activity, broadly based on ‘capturing the hearts and

minds’ of staff (Figure 3).

Figure 3: The Generic Change Process (Management Consultants proprietary)

The Engage Phase

Key to engagement was a simple vision for change, emphasising that patients had to be

prioritised as it was felt that being ‘patient-led’ would enable multifunctional teams to form,

improving staff motivation as well as outcomes. The message (Figure 4) was communicated

visually throughout the Ward:

Reducing NTHT’s Core Patient Care


MRSA Business and Safety
Infections Targets

Must Do Should Do Could Do

Figure 4: The Vision to Engage Change

9
Priorities were outlined as ‘must do’, ‘should do’ and ‘could do’, and an action plan

developed, attempting to define the central organising principles for the Hospital to shape

and express ‘the way things are done here’.

The Engage Phase centred on short-term initiatives with little or no reference to the cultural

context for attempting to change internal behaviours, grouped around the headings of

People, Process, Practice and Performance, with the main orientation on Process and

Performance. To become a patient-focused organisation, the Hospital had to provide a

consistent, organization-wide response to public and patient concerns over healthcare

associated infections.

The ‘patient-led’ perspective was intended to suggest a balance between the perceived

‘value’ of clinical safety and care and the perceived ‘value’ of patient experience. Staff were

encouraged to work towards a common goal, to consider addressing all issues that impact

upon the total patient experience. The initiatives were developed under the overall umbrella

of ‘Safe Hands’ rather than a specific change programme so that they could be embedded

into everyday working practices. The Chief Executive of the Hospital stated:

‘This should not be seen as just another change initiative but core to the organisation’s

renewed focus on patient safety.’

The Embed and Energise Phases

The Embed phase used the tools of lean, process improvement and change management.

The focus was for staff to understand if not create the ‘need for change’. Toyoda’s ‘5 Whys’

technique was used because it addresses single-problem events rather than broad

organisational issues and gets to the root cause of the problem. This is necessary when

dealing with the MRSA issue because it directs the receiver to the desire to create a

“Positive and Consistent Hospital Experience”, which can only be done through the

meaningful engagement of all staff with the same message and actions working towards

10
this. Two parallel work streams were embarked upon, emanating from the core idea of

“creating a positive and consistent hospital experience” (Figure 5) for the Energise phase:

 Evolutionary change: to embed sustainable, patient/customer-focused change

across the organisation.

 Transformational change: to make a quick and significant impact in the worst

performing areas

CORE
Evolutionary IDEA Transformational

Campaigning
Structural &
Marketing Idea Engagement
‘PR-ability’ Safe Hands
Patient Safe Zones
Trust Manifesto
& Pledge

Figure 5: A Balanced Response to Embedded Improvement (Management Consultants proprietary)

‘Patient Safe Zones’ were created at ward level through Instant Impact Interventions initially

focused on ‘Hot Spot’ areas. They were based on a combination of transformational

change, lean and kaizen principles. Cross-functional teams were formed, facilitated by

transformational change experts. This phase followed the RIE format typical of Lean change

initiatives in the NHS which provides short bursts of improvement activity over 5 days with a

cross-section of workers involved in a particular process (Burgess 2012).

To promote the overall ‘Safe Hands’ principle of patient safety and care, internal and
external communications campaigns were developed. Designed to focus on ‘creating a
positive and consistent hospital experience’ through the 4P’s: Public/Patient, People,
Place and Performance, these interventions echo Glouberman and Mintzberg’s (2001:60)
model in 4 quadrants where they discuss the four worlds of “care, cure, community and

11
control”. The intention of the 4 P’s approach was to demonstrate transparency and
commitment of purpose, weakening the ‘curtains’ (ibid) that inhibit communication and
collaboration.

The ‘Safe Hands’ campaign (Figure 6), combined for NH the RIE approach, 5S and the
consultants’ proprietary phased approach shown in Figure 3.

A single focus: creating a positive


and consistent hospital experience

Empowering front line teams to


improve the hospital experience for
all

Identify opportunities to improve the


hospital experience; generate Ideas
and Implement as many as possible,
(including planning the
implementation of those that take
longer than 5 days to implement)

A balanced approach as represented


by the 4P’s: patient/public, people,
place and performance

Events take place over a five day


period with ideas for improvement
implemented in 5 days, 5 week and 5
month periods as appropriate
Figure 6: The Safe Hands concept (Management Consultants proprietary)

Of 124 ideas generated on the first ward alone, 85 were implemented. A total of 5 Wards

were involved.

12
The Evaluate Phase

The impact of ‘Safe Hands’ was measured with existing performance management data

within the Hospital. Hand Hygiene Audit, Hand Hygiene e-learning and MRSA e-learning

scores improved by 24%, 44% and 60% respectively.

The performance of all five wards in the Wing had converged at a significantly higher level.

‘Soft’ aspects of the work were also evaluated by means of a staff questionnaire. A

summary of the key points is provided in Figures 7 and 8.

Delight = Extremely + Very Satisfied with the area in which you work

The Wing

Control Wing

The Wing – Doctors

The Wing – Nurses

The Wing – Other

Control Wing – Doctors


Significant
Control Wing – Nurses improvements
Control Wing – Other
in both relative
and historic
comparisons
The Wing – Ward 30

The Wing – Ward 32

The Wing – Ward 33

The Wing – Ward 34

How satisfaction compares


to 3 months ago

Figure 7: Staff delight with their work area (physical environment)

Figure 7 shows that staff in wards 33 and 34, the first two wards to complete the ‘Safe

Hands’ process, were significantly more satisfied with their area of work. Overall, staff

noticed change and the significant impacts achieved, demonstrated in terms of relative to

Control Wing and over time, (compared to three months previous). Specifically, the

improvements related to layout, cleanliness, availability of equipment and an emerging

sense of teamwork.

13
Beckett
The Wing Martin
Control Wing

Team spirit / morale


70
52

Level of co-operation within your team


75
61

Level of co-operation between your team and other teams 70


37

The amount of time you get to spend on the really important parts of your 41
job 15

The time you spend at work (as part of your scheduled hours)
66
39

Your overall working conditions


46
35

Figure 8: Staff satisfaction with their working lives

However, Figure 8 shows there was less willingness to tackle longer-term issues around

culture, leadership, engagement and evolutionary change. This may have been because of

general resistance to change than to overall aims. This corresponds with the lack of

accountability identified in the findings analysis as a significant issue at NH. It is also

anecdotally representative of NHS culture as a whole, particularly in the hierarchies that

exist within and between different professions, (consultants, doctors, nurses and managers),

the evolution of which is detailed in Klein (2010).

Greater cultural allegiance to the profession than the employer is typical of organisations

aligned as professional bureaucracies ((Mintzberg 1983). Yet alignment with professional

not patient-focused mores runs counter to the idea of ‘creating a positive and consistent

hospital experience’ in terms of its impact on consistency of service delivery. Measuring

culture to foster change for improved quality and performance is acknowledged as being

important (Karp 2008), yet existing tools may be inadequate, given the paucity of information

around understanding the culture measurements.

“This sounds fantastic – if we could have the same – but empowering staff needs to be

backed up by both physical and financial resource” Consultant from Control Wing

14
“Staff are happier at work – knock on effects to other staff and to patients” Consultant from

The Wing

So What?

This project was a resounding success in the Ward. MRSA infection rates had been

reduced, which was the original objective. However, this had been achieved through an

internal change programme and not a social marketing exercise, a consequence of which

was that there were also a number of unintended staff-related improvements, highlighted in

Figure 8. Morale had improved. Traditional silo working had reduced. The effects of

greater co-operation were being felt by patients and shown in productivity figures the NH

collated.

The smallest improvement area, “Your overall working conditions” highlights in this hospital

issues around systematic learning and consistent service delivery, identified earlier in the

Chapter. Given the evidence of this intervention, why did the hospital’s management not

use this project as a pilot and implement the same changes throughout NH? Why were the

service outcome improvements not seen as important enough to be replicated hospital-

wide? Further questions arise regarding the overview taken by both hospital management

and the NSHA, such as why did neither body consider the wider results from the project and

the potential implication for the hospital itself or the whole NSHA? Why did they simply

accept that MRSA infection rates had fallen to ‘acceptable’ levels and therefore consider the

project a success, and thereby completed?

How does the NH project compare with other NHS initiatives?

Research on NHS performance improvement projects using Lean provides observations and

commentary on specific situations. Service quality and effectiveness have become

significant priorities and have led to the naïve application of external, business sector

managerial policies, with the tools of Lean and short-term activities as the primary focus,

15
ignoring the over-arching cultural ethos and the centrality of the customer (Currie et al. 2008,

Klein 2010, Radnor and Osborne 2013). Operating processes and systems have internal

indicators of success, focused on the reporting of centrally-set targets. Cannon (2013)

assessed that as much as 90% of work, and improvement projects, within the NHS are

driven by failure demand, caused by a failure or an error. He argues systematic increase in

demand is a function of the way the system has failure designed into it rather than inevitable.

Cannon states the eradication of non-value-adding work is the only way to improve

performance in the NHS. To do this, the NHS must only do what matters to the user.

Cannon’s exhortation epitomises the ethos of Lean. As others have stated (Millard 2011,

Radnor et al. 2012), success lies in patient-centred definitions of value and waste.

Burgess (2012) evaluated Lean implementations in 143 NHS Hospitals to explore the

context, process and content of Lean implementation by English hospital Hospitals. The

findings from the Case Studies are shown in Table 1. NH has been added to this Table for

comparison purposes.

Case Study
UHCW ELHT RBH SHK NH
Drivers
Performance targets and finance    
Quality    
Chief Executive 
Impact
Small simple changes    
Focus on patient   
Learning to see    
Implementing new standards   
Challenging steps   
Reduced ‘did not attend’  
Improved morale  
Changing culture 
Improved performance 
Table 1: Lean Implementation – Drivers and content (Adapted from Burgess 2012:261/257)

16
Typical of Lean projects within the NHS, the NH project was also concerned with the

organisation of work, and with the specific tasks and responsibilities therein. As explained,

this is core to Lean and could explain why the consultants gravitated towards using these

tools having uncovered during the Engage phase that problems were internal and not

something the patients and public could change. Whilst the stated focus for the consulting

engagement was the end-user and the public the actual driver was a response to DoH

targets with regard to HAI. Clearly, a reduction in infection rates improves quality. The 15%

year-on-year improvement resulting from the NH project is in keeping with other

performance improvement projects where tangible outcomes are noted. However, less

typically, the NH project also evaluated cultural change (Figure 7) and although it identified a

reluctance to tackle longer-term issues, it did at least highlight the need for them to be

considered.

In practice at NH Lean was used as a constellation of activities related to a pre-existing,

target-led problem and not the wholesale organisational change ethos which true Lean is

(Radnor et al. 2012). It used the most prominent tools encountered elsewhere, such as

RIEs, looking at micro-level improvements to raise service quality and patient experience.

However, as stated previously, this project differed from typical change programmes

embarked upon within NHS hospitals in that the commissioning NSHA did not identify the

problem correctly. It saw patients and the public as the implementers of change and for this

reason wanted social marketing to be used to engender change in performance regarding

MRSA in a wing of NH. It was the management consultants, who, once engaged and

embarked on investigating the situation in the 5 wards in the Wing, found through the

Review phase that staff and the public saw internal issues to be more pertinent for resolution

rather than external ones. Staff and the public showed a greater awareness of operational

issues than management. Once again this highlights problems with the prevailing

organisational culture and with accountability. This is interesting of itself, but does prompt

17
questions about what service quality means to NHS management, and how they see their

role in fulfilling this ‘prevailing purpose’.

For this reason, this project was Lean by accident. Lean was not the primary purpose.

Instead the tools of Lean provided the most suitable mechanism for resolving the immediate

issues, identified in the Review phase. In typical Lean fashion, the root causes were found

to lie elsewhere, and not in the stated identified problem. Yes, MRSA infection rates had

exceeded the centrally-set target and contravened centrally-driven performance measures.

The Review phase showed that working practices had led to this, and once they were

changed, the corollary was that MRSA infection rates reduced. The CEO of NH announced

on 17th January 2014 that they had achieved 135 consecutive days of an MRSA-free

hospital, a sustainable performance improvement of note.

So why were the cultural changes not recognised and celebrated? Why was the link

between the imperative of cultural change to the delivery of the clinical governance aims

expressed in the NHS Plan firstly not acknowledged, and secondly not communicated

throughout the organisations (locally, and the broader NHS)?

Papadopoulos et al. (2011) have noted, use of Lean as a label for interventions in the NHS

is widespread but the interpretation is varied. Lean should be a cultural transformation that

changes how an organisation works. It requires new habits, new skills and a new attitude

throughout the organisation in order to fulfil the underlying goal of improving value for the

patient (Toussaint and Berry 2013). Yet the reality appears to be that Lean follows a line of

service improvement that brings to the fore tensions between clinicians and service leaders

around the organisation and the delivery of healthcare work (Mazzocato et al. 2010). It

seems Lean principles have become entangled with other reforms and the competing voices

of policy-makers, managers, clinical leaders and management consultants and illustrates the

desire of policymakers to reorder clinical work thought the introduction of management

philosophies and techniques (Waring and Bishop 2010). This leads to question whether

18
more could be achieved within NHS hospitals if government preoccupation with centralised

control and micro-management through targets was replaced with a template intended to

reduce boundaries within and across organisations and organisational members,

synchronising policy aspirations with existing power arrangements (Currie and Suhomlinova

2006, Klein 2010).

Would an Operations Strategy approach make a difference?

Control is a necessary aspect of managing an organisation since it provides information and

a starting premise for decision-making. However, at the micro-level that hospitals have to

respond to, it becomes a static concept. The culture of continuous improvement, which

emerges from a holistic Lean implementation introduces a dynamic concept into an

organisation. It requires choices to be made about the tools to use, in which order and in

which emphasis (Garvin 1992). These are surprisingly difficult decisions to make, and

especially so without an over-arching framework within which to place thinking. Operations

Strategy encourages an organisation to focus on a holistic understanding of needs in order

to fully realise potential benefits. For a hospital, the primary need would be that of the

patient, yet generally the policy-setter has been deemed the priority stakeholder, a situation

which has resulted in value as specified by the public user at odds with the best use of

resources against a backdrop of budget cuts and efficiency targets. The environment driven

by policy and spending reviews means the requirement to engage with process

improvements and other concepts is driven from management, making staff management-

facing and not patient-facing, responsive to internal measures and targets and not patient

requirements (Seddon and Caulkin 2007). Indeed, the case outlined in this chapter

illustrates that point exactly since the driver was a response to achieve DoH HAI targets,

albeit the targets, being to reduce infection rates, in this case are patient-focused.

Currently, there are a number of issues which make an already complex situation more

difficult to unravel. Patient value and patient needs can take on a variety of forms depending

19
on who is expressing the need – the commissioners, the clinicians, the taxpayer or the

patient (Radnor et al. 2012). Costs in the healthcare sector are too high and growing too

quickly, which places pressure on government budgets and threatens the availability of

timely care and best treatments (Graban and Swartz 2012). The strategies for patient care

and meeting centrally-set performance targets appear to be pointing in different directions

and removing an integrated care ethos (Currie and Suhomlinova 2006).

Organisations in all industries develop strategies to respond to environmental factors and

competitive challenges such as these. These strategies drive operational decisions. The

idiosyncratic nature of the environment in hospital settings suggests the need to develop

models that are specific to this industry and which align good overall system performance

and minimise dysfunction effects between strategy deployment and operational practice

(Goldstein et al. 2002, Esain et al. 2008). Good service operations management should lead

to better or more appropriate services and experiences providing ‘triple bottom line’ benefits

- better for patients, staff and the organisation (Johnston et al. 2012).

To deliver better or more appropriate services, the NHS, like all service businesses needs to

have over-arching strategies in place to try and prevent non-aligned and disjointed activities

and decisions. A number of approaches exist, largely discussing similar principles but

espousing different thinking or activities as a purpose and way of developing this strategy.

Two of these approaches are now examined and their potential usefulness to the NHS

reflected upon. Firstly, the Slack and Lewis Operations Strategy framework is shown in

Figure 9. According to Slack and Lewis (2011) the application of an operations strategy

should be central to senior managers.

20
Figure 9: Operations Strategy framework (Slack and Lewis 2011:2)

To understand how an organisation works, they say, the interaction between all resources

needs to be examined. In the context of the NHS, this framework is useful because it brings

together the four views which encompass an organisation - operational resources, market

requirements, operational experience and corporate strategy. Examination of each view

exposes the dilemmas inherent within an organisation, notably the tension between market

requirements and the operational response possible according to resource capabilities. Part

of the ‘content’ of operations strategy is concerned with the organisation structure and the

responsibility relations within the operations function. For a hospital this encompasses the

complexities of the power relations already discussed between commissioners, clinicians

and managers.

One of the problems with this framework for hospitals, or the NHS, is that it does not help

identify what the priorities are and in what order they could be addressed. The diagram

appears to show that everything should be treated equally at the same time. It is not clear

21
whether it matters what we do, in what order and what the difference would be. Yet as

Garvin (1992) and Ritchie (2002) have both stated, it is knowing the order of priority and the

degree of emphasis to place on it that is critical if long-term success is to be achieved. The

case presented confirms this, albeit through omission rather than commission. The

potentially far-reaching development of new working-habits and the unlearning of some old

working practices that could help deliver sustainable, accountable, patient-focused, quality

healthcare was overlooked in favour of recognising an immediate performance indicator

improvement.

The Sandcone model (Figure 10) is another way of developing an Operations Strategy.

Unlike the Slack and Lewis approach, it provides an order for the journey of continuous

improvement. Ferdows and de Meyer (1990) state that excellence is built on a common set

of fundamental principles. The sand imagery is a stand-in for management effort and

resources. The sequence represents building a stable foundation which as you continue to

pour sand you move up the path towards the development of lasting organisational

capabilities, needing exponentially more effort and therefore a broader foundation as you

move up through the steps. The sequence outlined helps organisations achieve substance

and not just form. Cost is last not because cost improvements are an ultimate consequence

of resources and management efforts invested in the improvement of quality, dependability

and speed.

22
Figure 10: The Sandcone Model (Ferdows and De Meyer 1990:175)

The NH case appears to conform to this view in that the Ward had shown service quality

improvements, in patient-centric and target-compliance terms, due to its clear goal of MRSA

infection-rate reduction. Where it falls is in the ensuing expansion and enrichment, since

there is no evidence the gains were leveraged. This is an important point to emphasise,

given the literature on Lean in healthcare in the main seems to demonstrate that seeking

‘low hanging fruit’ seems widespread while lasting cultural improvement is scant. The NH

case appears also to confirm that in the NHS form seems to be a more significant driver than

substance, with the short-term goal being given more emphasis than the potential benefit of

exponential gain through cultural changes leading to the embedding of new working

practices.

Speed refers to elapsed service provision time and responsiveness, which provides an

organisation with flexibility – and thereby further enhanced performance. For patients,

responsiveness and elapsed time are key features of the functional quality they perceive and

receive. This is core to the idea of ‘sustainable patient value’, as espoused by NH

management, yet the core pursuit was conformance to centrally-set targets.

23
Improvements obtained in this way are more stable and likely to be more sustainable

because they emerged as a result of the deeper penetration of good management practices.

This is difficult at the best of times and tantamount to impossible if management effort and

resources are focused on fulfilling a frequently-changing government agenda rather than on

developing lasting organisational capabilities. If ‘low hanging fruit’ in the form of the meeting

of centrally-set targets is the constant goal, then the more lasting operational successes

achievable through holistic, organisational continuous improvement as advocated by the

Sandcone concept will always remain a chimera.

The advantage of this model seems to be that it encourages the development and nurturing

of organisational capabilities cumulatively, which appears to imply they will be more deeply

ingrained and therefore longer lasting. Through its cumulative principles it takes into

account the trade-off concept, suggesting the specific pattern of capability enhancement

incorporates relevant trade-offs as the organisation moves up the pyramid.

Conclusion

The main contribution of this chapter is the consideration that an Operations Strategy

developed specifically for Healthcare could lead to a holistic continuous improvement ethos.

Lean addresses whole organisational issues, but its application in Healthcare precludes this.

The tools of Lean when used in isolation tend to address single-problem events and ignore

the centrality of the customer. It was the centrality of the customer to a single-issue event

which drove NH and NSHA management to engage consultants. The over-riding theme

from staff was the requirement for greater clarity and consistency of leadership across the

organisation. External stakeholder concerns were about inconsistency of service quality and

delivery. This combination emphasises the ‘patient-led’ perspective, and the need for

multifunctional teams, balancing patient experience with clinical safety and providing a

common organisational goal. At NH, embedding changes into everyday working practices

24
appears to have diluted organisation-wide action, resulting in keeping the changes isolated

within one Ward.

In line with an estimated 90% of work within the NHS (Cannon, 2013), the NH consulting

intervention was driven by failure-demand – the non-achievement of MRSA targets. This

implies implying management emphasis on target-fulfilment, showing an internal, not

customer, focus. As Radnor et al. (2012), Millard (2011) and Cannon (2013) state, success

lies in patient-centred understanding of delivery and waste. Adopting an Organisation

Strategy approach, like adopting Lean, means changing how an organisation works. An

Operations Strategy tries to prevent non-aligned, disjointed activities and decisions whilst

allowing for local variations. It means developing new habits, skills and attitudes to reduce

boundaries within and across organisations and organisational members, as happened in

the Ward at NH. Organising to deliver that is what an operations strategy can help achieve.

Service quality in a hospital is not just about reaching targets set by a central government

department; it is about ensuring that the patient experience is consistent throughout a stay

whilst nevertheless delivering a successful clinical outcome. This is probably achieved in the

main throughout the NHS but the creation of an Operations Strategy would demonstrate a

tangible audit trail from inception to implementation, showing patient value to all its

stakeholders.

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