Value Stream Mapping in healthcare: ergonomic implications and the significance of adding an ergonomic module - The NOVO Multicentre Study I

Background During the recent decade “Lean production” has become a prevalent rationalization methodology in healthcare. A commonly applied Lean tool is Value Stream Mapping (VSM). It is a participatory tool, i.a. used to identify non-Value-Adding-Work (non-VAW) in patient flows. The process results...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Winkel, Jørgen, Edwards, Kasper, Jarebrant, Caroline, Birgisdóttir, Birna Dröfn, Johansson Hanse, Jan, Harlin, Ulrika, Ulin, Kerstin, Gunnarsdóttir, Sigrún
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbit.dtu.dk/en/publications/54834bc6-6647-48c9-883a-5439c95022dd
https://backend.orbit.dtu.dk/ws/files/163165259/NOVO2018_proceedings.pdf
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Summary:Background During the recent decade “Lean production” has become a prevalent rationalization methodology in healthcare. A commonly applied Lean tool is Value Stream Mapping (VSM). It is a participatory tool, i.a. used to identify non-Value-Adding-Work (non-VAW) in patient flows. The process results in an Action Plan suggesting interventions aiming at minimizing non-VAW in order to increase the proportion of value creation. Scientific evidence indicates that non-VAW often represents periods of physical and mental recovery. Reduction of nonVAW may therefore cause ”Work intensification”. On this background the VSM tool has been complemented by an ergonomic module (ErgoVSM) to be used in the healthcare sector (Jarebrant et al., 2010). The aim of the present study was to investigate differences in Action Plans regarding expected impact on ergonomics and performance issues when using ErgoVSM rather than VSM. Material and Methods Fourteen hospital wards were investigated, six in Denmark, two in Iceland and six in Sweden (one VSM ward refused to complete). In each country half the wards used VSM according to their ordinary Lean routines and the other half used ErgoVSM. All action plans were collected and each proposal was analysed based on triangulations between different stakeholder assessments. Data were analysed using Fisher's exact test of contingency tables of impact on four factors: Work Environment (WE, +/0/-), task/job content/system and efficiency according to VSM/ErgoVSM. Results Of a total of 175 proposals from all the investigated wards 106 were assessed as causing WE+, 8 WE-, 20 WE0, and 41 Not Assessable. Of the 106 WE+ proposals 78% aimed at system level changes (job content and work situation), the remaining at task level changes or not assessable. This is in contrast to the intervention proposals generally investigated in the ergonomic intervention literature focusing almost exclusively interventions at task and individual level. Using ErgoVSM rather than VSM in Sweden and Iceland resulted in a higher ...