When Does Something Become a No-Brainer?

July 23, 2008 · Filed Under Cost Management · Comment 

 

I just read an article about how all of our nation’s hospitals aren’t reprocessing the numerous medical devices that have been approved as safe by the FDA to do so – even though you can save 50% of your medical devices’ original cost.  Wouldn’t you think this was a “no-brainer” for all hospitals?  Here’s the rest of the story!

 

The reason given in the article on why all hospitals haven’t jumped on the reprocessing bandwagon is that they think it will be too time-consuming to do so because of the numerous internal changes in behavior that would be needed to achieve this savings.

 

So maybe this reprocessing idea isn’t a “No-Brainer” after all or is it? But how would you know unless you tried it? This is the key for knowing when something is a “No-Brainer” or not. Experiment to find the real answers instead of tuning out the sales rep because his or her “its easy” message seems to implausible to believe.

 

Nothing good happens unless you are willing to experiment with a pilot study to determine the financial, quality and service fitness of any proposed new product, service or technology. This way, you will know with certainty when something becomes a “No-Brainer” for your healthcare organization — or not.

LEAN Six Sigma: The Future is Now!

June 25, 2008 · Filed Under Best Practices, Lean Management, Supply Six Sigma, six sigma · Comment 

I had an electronic interview last week with Rick Dana Barlow Senior Editor of Hospital Purchasing News, for a future article on LEAN Six Sigma.  This HPN interview got me thinking about how important it is for supply chain professionals to get on the LEAN Six Sigma train to meet their huge challenges over the next decade.  Here are some of the ideas I spoke about in my HPN interview that I think you will find of interest.

 

First of all, Lean Management and Six Sigma are two different, but complementary methodologies, linked together into a unifying process called LEAN Six Sigma. LEAN Six Sigma has helped thousands of companies and hundreds of healthcare organizations dramatically improve their quality and increase their bottom line. What makes Lean management and Six Sigma different from TQM/CQI is their highly disciplined approach, their focus on waste and inefficiencies in the supply chain, speed and reducing the wide variances in products, services and processes employed and then controlling them – forevermore!

 

The healthcare supply chains are an ideal application for the Lean management or Six Sigma principles because they are transaction-based functions.  For example, one big lesson we have learned from Toyota, the creators of Lean Management, is that purchasing departments can have as much as 50% non-value-added activities (i.e. activities customers wouldn’t pay for if they knew about them) that can be reduced by as much as a third by employing the Lean Management methodology. In this age of doing more with less we in supply chain management need to embrace these proven concepts so that we can optimize our resources just to keep pace with the changing healthcare marketplace.

 

Just as important, Lean Management and Six Sigma offers supply chain managers a disciplined, standardized, repeatable, and measurable system to reduce their cost and improve their quality.  Its tenets can be applied to any initiative that a supply chain manager is asked to undertake (inventory management, PPIs, standardization, utilization, etc.)  These concepts are really a magic bullet for supply chain managers to have even faster, better and more consistent supply chain operations.

 

I believe that the reason that more supply chain managers haven’t adopted these concepts is their belief that it will take too much of their time for them to learn, manage and sustain these new ways of doing things. In reality these concepts will actually save thousands of hours of year in reduced time, effort and expenses for supply chain managers.  Education is the answer to moving material managers from a passive to an active role in adopting these new ways to managing their complex multi-million dollar supply chains.

 

That’s it for the short excerpt from my HPN interview, but it shouldn’t be the end of our dialog on this important topic. I would like to hear your ideas on this subject matter as well so we can get all supply chain professionals on the LEAN Six Sigma train.  

 

How Are You Selecting Your Value Analysis Projects?

June 20, 2008 · Filed Under Best Practices, Change Mgt., Cost Management, Value Analysis · Comment 

First of all, don’t confuse new or renewal GPO contracts as being value analysis projects, because they are not.  This is contract management in its purest sense, which is a whole other discipline that has its own rules and models.

What I’m talking about here is the way in which you selecting your VA projects, which can unearth millions of dollars of savings in your value streams.  For the best results, you should establish criteria for the selection of your VA projects. Here are five criteria I would suggest you start with: 

1.                Dollar Threshold: No VA project should be undertaken on a product, service or technology that has less than a $25,000 annual spend.  The reason: Your ROI would be very small, if at all!

2.                Projected Timeline: If your VA project will take more than 90-days to complete it might be better to break the project into smaller projects. Projects that have long timelines tend to go off track.  Keep your projects in bit size pieces!

3.                Probability of Success: If you only have a 50% probability of success in implementing a project (e.g. orthopedic implant study) then delay the project until you have an 80% success factor.

4.                Project Alignment: If your VA project is not supported by your management then I would delay it for another day. Why fight city hall – you rarely win!

5.                Solution Clarity:  If you already know the solution to a problem (e.g. defective material) then don’t initiate a VA project — just fix the problem. It will save you a lot of time and effort by doing so.

These are just a few ideas to get you on the road to selecting the best VA Projects using criteria vs. gut feel with the greatest possible ROIs.

 

Your Partner In Innovative Savings, 

Bob Yokl

Robert T Yokl

Chief Value Strategist

Strategic Value Analysis® In Healthcare

 

P.S. My staff thinks I’m crazy to offer our e-newsletter subscribers a 30-day “test drive” on our Utilizer™ Dashboard and you only pay if it works! But I’m so convinced that once you try it you won’t want to live without it that I have turned a deaf ear to my staff’s objections to bring you this outrageous “pay if it works” guarantee.  Email me to learn more about this special offer - bobpres@strategicva.com

P.P.S. Don’t forget to check out my new blog article “A Lean Way of Thinking! This will give you a new way of thinking about your workload.