Solutions for a Healthy Bottom Line
Improving Business and Clinical Operations
By Kathy Dix, Kris Ellis, and Jennifer Schraag
Reducing costs to an optimal level across all aspects of a facility’s
operations may have a significant cumulative effect on the bottom line.
Attention to big-picture issues as well as minute details can pay off in this
respect. Successfully addressing cost inefficiencies while maintaining optimal
conditions for patient safety can be advantageous for any ambulatory surgery
center (ASC).
Susan R. Kizirian, RN, MBA, vice president of operations at Ambulatory
Surgical Centers of America (ASCOA), identifies case costing as a common cost
reduction strategy, but notes that it is rarely implemented effectively. “Case
costing is the process whereby a list of disposable medical supplies, implants,
prosthetics, and pharmaceuticals used for the patient from admission to
discharge is collected,” she says. “The data is then reviewed and analyzed for the appropriateness of each
item. The cost of each case is then compared to the same procedure performed
within the facility and ultimately against some external benchmark.”
Kizirian explains that this strategy allows the ASC to examine its purchasing
processes in conjunction with its supply utilization processes periodically and
thoroughly. “If case costing is actively embraced as a continuous learning and
improvement process to select supplies, implants, prosthetics, and
pharmaceuticals that are optimal for each procedure and patient, it is a win for
the patient, a win for the surgeon, and a win for the facility’s cost
containment efforts.”
Carrie Dickerson, senior vice president of operations design at Nueterra
Healthcare, notes her organization’s supply value analysis is a useful cost
reduction tool. “We take the highest supply dollar amounts and review those
for very specific things,” she says. “Are we paying the correct price? Are
they on our group purchasing organization (GPO) contract? Are there generic or
alternative items that can be used that would reduce the cost? If there are, are
those items comparable in quality, and if so, are they acceptable to the
physicians? We go through that on every item.”
Making the effort to negotiate favorable contracts with distributors,
manufacturers, or a GPO can be key in cutting costs, according to Karen Cox, RN,
BSN, director of clinical operations at Regent Surgical Health. “When you have
negotiated the cost and you know what the price would be, you use the materials
management portion of your software, and when anything comes in, do a quick
check to make sure that you’re actually getting that pricing,” she says. “You’d
be surprised at how many deals are negotiated but the prices are never inputted and never
checked, and they’re incorrect.”
Kizirian notes that there are many organizations that will assist ASCs in
assessing lower prices for the products and services they use. “The dilemma ASCs face is the complexity of the GPO and utilizing the
processes and ever-changing data from the GPO effectively. Tracking the discounted price that was billed is tedious, and information
systems often do not interface (or the cost is prohibitive to interface) to
track and trend this data. Ultimately, GPOs will reduce the cost of disposable
medical supplies, pharmaceuticals, equipment, and instrumentation. To what level
that reduction will occur depends on the savvy of the ASC using their particular
GPO’s services and the service the GPO provides to assure that the ASC is
getting optimal pricing and accurate invoicing.”
In addition to cost-effective supply procurement, efficient use and
conservation of supplies may also be a key strategy. “In surgical suites, our
OR (operating room) staff members do not open any surgical supplies until the
surgeon actually needs or asks for it,” says Ann S. Deters, MBA, CPA, chief
executive officer of SevenD and Associates LLC. “This has allowed us to
recognize significant savings in supply costs per case.” Also, Deters notes
that surgeons frequently don’t use all of the items listed on preference
cards.
Informing staff about supply costs and getting them on board with cost
savings efforts may prove beneficial. “Get them involved with various
processes that allow your staff to become better educated on particular costs
incurred at a surgery center,” Deters suggests. “For example, we involve all our staff in quarterly inventory counts. This
highlights for them the excess items and allows them the opportunity to ask
questions about particular inventory items, i.e., what are the costs, why do we
have so many quantities in stock, etc. In some facilities, our staff posts unit costs on each inventory item in
order to educate the staff and the surgeons on the costs incurred in each and
every case.”
“Schedule compression is another common strategy that is seldom
well-utilized,” Kizirian says. “Schedule compression views a certain portion
of wages and benefits expense as variable.” Given that wages and benefits often account for up to one-fifth to one-third
of an ASC’s expense budget, Kizirian suggests this is a wise strategy to
embrace for those with bottom line responsibilities. “This strategy embraces a
core staff to provide services for a fixed number of cases, and then a
peripheral staff to provide additional services for a variable number of cases.
Additionally, the schedule compression calls for reallocating surgeon OR time
based on utilization by the surgeon. The schedule is then ‘compressed;’ only running the necessary number of
ORs for the optimal number of hours with a smooth flowing schedule of ‘to-follow’
cases. Surgeons have to be flexible in reallocating their office hours. There is
virtually no impact on safety or quality. It is just a smart use of the ASC’s
resources.”
Cox explains that effective scheduling requires working closely with surgeon
partners and schedulers. “You try to give as much block time as you can and
fill that block time up,” she says. “At your physicians’ staff meetings,
always let them know if the ASC could be more efficient if somebody moved their
block time up, for example. Your physician investors are concerned about money
matters as well; they’d like to have a bigger return on their investment, and
as managers of surgery centers, we try to let them know how they can be more
helpful in that and you’d be surprised at how many of them listen and do try
to become good, productive partners in an efficient manner.”
In terms of staffing, Dickerson notes that productivity value analysis can
help to identify cost containment opportunities. In this case, overall
productivity measures are applied to the OR, pre-op, and the post anesthesia
care unit (PACU), from a clinical standpoint. “We also take it a step further
and look at each case that we do to see what staff we have in the room, and if
those staff members are required throughout the case or only through part of the
case,” she says. “Then we look at the fluctuations among physicians within
the same procedure. For example, if you have a knee scope, one might require two scrub techs and
a circulator, while another one requires one circulator, one scrub tech, and
another scrub tech for 15 minutes of the case. Then we look at what creates the
variances and if it’s an education and training event.”
Cox points out that staffing should be dependent on the case schedule. “When
patients are there, that’s when you need your staff there,” she says. “That’s particularly true on the clinical side; when the
patients are not there, you don’t need your staff there. It then becomes a
balance of how to keep your good staff there and giving them the number of hours
that they need.”
For new staff members, flexibility is vital. “They need to get out of the mindset that this is shift work,” Cox
continues. “You might work from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday, 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Wednesday, so find out what their
flexibility is and explain to them that you’re going to get them as many hours
as possible, but it’s just not going to be eight, 10, 12 hours like you’re
used to getting at a time. The second part of that is many surgery centers rely
on their per diem people; quite a few surgery centers live and die by their per
diem people. This seems to be a trend across the country that I’ve seen —
many nurses don’t want full-time work, but they want to work while the kids
are at school, a few hours during this day, more hours during another day, and
we take advantage of that and appreciate the hours that they do give us. A lot of planning goes into that; after a while you get to know what your
general schedule is, what your heavy days are, what your light days are, and
your staff gets used to that as well to some extent.”
A registered nurse (RN) who can work in pre-op, the OR, and PACU is also a
valuable asset to the ASC, Kizirian notes. “During the course of any work day,
the need for skills in these areas experiences many ‘peaks and valleys’
based on patient needs. If the RN can cross over and work in multiple areas
during the peak periods, this eliminates the need to bring in additional staff.
For instance, an RN who can admit the patients in the morning and then work in
PACU or relieve the OR for lunch prior to the end of her early shift would
eliminate the need to bring in additional staff to cover these time periods.”
“From a productivity standpoint, we usually look at pre-op and PACU, and
stage 2 recovery, or step-down, in terms of areas that staff can normally
cross-train fairly efficiently in,” Dickerson says. “With the OR, we find that this is a fairly specialized
area, which makes cross-training difficult, but our OR staff members do train in
materials management and sterilization.”
Interviewing a potential staff member who has experience in multiple
environments, such as the OR and recovery area, is always a plus, Cox adds. “If
everybody came to your facility with those credentials, you would be ecstatic. Some of the other cross-training, maybe you’ve got a top surgical
technician who’s also into materials management; they can be the person who
orders stock and supplies. Maybe you have a sterile processing technician who
also has a background in surgical technology, and they can be there for an extra pair of
hands.”
Cross-training of the business staff can also provide cost advantages. “An
ASC is usually a small business,” Kizirian says. “Having the business office
staff cross-train for patient registration, patient scheduling, insurance
follow- up, reception, and medical records tasks is vital. During vacation
periods and episodic turnover, the essential work continues and critical
knowledge and skills are retained.”
Kizirian points out that other opportunities to minimize cost may exist on
the business front as well. “Outsourcing transcription or the use of
template-driven operating reports is a simple change that can lower wages and
salaries (transcription) or outsourcing (template-driven operating report),”
she says. “There is a myriad of transcription services available, and
template-driven operating reports can be quickly created and used at any
computer workstation containing MS Word or MS Excel or their counterparts.”
OR Efficiency
OR efficiency is an important path to generating more revenue. The more cases
a center performs, the more money it will bring in. Recent research has found many facets that can enhance efficiency. They
include process design, effective communication, parallel processing, and
fast-tracking.
OR turnover time and daily caseload can be improved by simply analyzing the
routine tasks of the OR team and minimizing inefficiencies.1 In a study
conducted at the University of Florida, the assigned tasks and work flow
patterns of the OR team during operations and OR turnover were studied and
changes were implemented where inefficiencies were observed. The changes decreased OR turnover times (from 43.7 minutes to 27.7 minutes),
and resulted in an increased number of cases completed per day among four
different surgeons (from 1.78 to 2.34).
Problems in communication and information flow, and workload and competing
tasks also have a measurable negative impact on team performance as well as
patient safety, according to researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in
Boston.2 In researching OR communication patterns, researchers found that
automating certain aspects of preparing patients for surgery and surgical
equipment management has the potential to decrease interruptions to clinicians
and diminish the possibility of adverse events in the clinical setting.3
Parallel processing is an interesting concept. A study conducted at Massachusetts General Hospital researched the use of
parallel processing in an attempt to increase caseloads in ambulatory ORs.4 The
researchers explain that in most OR settings, patients move through their
operative day in a linear fashion — beginning at registration and finishing in
the recovery room. Given this pattern, only one patient may occupy the efforts
of the OR team at a given time. By processing patients in a parallel fashion,
the researchers say OR efficiency and patient throughput can be increased while
costs remain stable.
In this particular study, patients undergoing hernia repairs under local
anesthesia with intravenous (IV) sedation were divided into two groups – one
received their local anesthesia in the OR at the start of the surgery, the other
in the induction room while the OR was being cleaned and set up.
The turnover time and the induction time proved significantly shorter for the
experimental group resulting in a cumulative reduction in time that was
sufficient enough to allow the addition of new operative cases.
“This study demonstrates a system of increasing OR efficiency by changing
patient flow rather than simply working to streamline existing steps,” the
researchers wrote.
In a similar German study, researchers concluded that the use of parallel
processing “increases productivity and profit despite the expense of
additional staff.”5 The researchers found that the time of care of regularly
scheduled cases was shortened and the number of cases performed within OR block
time increased (151 to 184 cases). Nonsurgical time decreased (1:08 to 0:57),
turnover time decreased (0:38 to 0:25), and anesthesia control time plus
turnover time decreased (0:43 to 0:28).
Deliberate OR and perioperative process redesign improves turnover times and
facilitates the execution of the processing mentioned above.6 During one Harvard
study, researchers constructed a three-room suite which included an OR, an
induction room, and an early recovery area. All nonsurgical activities were
moved from the OR to the supporting spaces.
Performance improvement was achieved from relocating and reorganizing the
nonoperative activities. Moreover, all components of nonoperative time were meaningfully reduced in this study and nonoperative
time was lowered from 67 minutes to 38 minutes. Operative time also decreased by
approximately 5 percent. This project involved additional costs, but the researchers conclude that the
additional revenue generated by the ability to do more cases balances those
costs.
Robert Goldstein, MD, a practicing board-certified anesthesiologist and
executive vice president and chief medical officer of Somnia Inc., says parallel
processing is beneficial, but advises it should only be used in the delivery of
regional anesthesia. “We find it’s a great help for a number of reasons.
Those blocks can take up to 15 minutes to complete, depending on the patient and
the situation. The utilization of OR time for that can pose many significant
hurdles.
“From a cost standpoint, there is certainly an expense factor for having a
patient in an OR 15 minutes longer, a half an hour longer, however much longer
it would be. Regional anesthesia technique is intended to be a long duration
process, so if the patient has a numbed leg because you put the block in in the
holding area before surgery and there was a delay of them getting into the OR
for a half an hour that would be acceptable.
Now on the flip side if you said to me why not use this induction room to put
them under general anesthesia, roll them into the OR intubated, I would say that
that is a whole different animal. You are exposing a patient to an extended
period of anesthesia when there is no upside to it. With general anesthesia that
exposure, in my opinion, is an unnecessary risk and there is no reward for it.
The cost savings vs. the exposure to the patient is not reasonable.”
Bypassing the PACU, or fast-tracking (FT), is another avenue that is fast
becoming commonplace. FT has been accepted as cost effective and safe — providing adequate
patient selection.7
In a study involving 207 patients, anesthesia was induced and maintained with
a standardized technique.8 At the end of surgery, patients were randomly
assigned to either a routine or FT group. Patients in the FT group were
transferred from the OR to the day surgical unit (DSU) (i.e., bypassing the PACU)
if they achieved the FT criteria. All other patients were transferred to the
PACU and then to the DSU. Overall time from end of anesthesia to discharge home
was significantly decreased in the FT group. However, overall patient care hours
and costs remained similar in the two recovery groups.
“There are definitely upsides to the concept of fast tracking,” says
Goldstein. “If a patient has met the criteria (i.e. scoring high enough on the
Aldrete scoring system) to bypass the recovery room, then in my opinion it is a
waste of resources for a patient to be in a recovery room when they don’t need
to be in a recovery room.”
“Nurse to patient ratio is lower in the FT room than in the recovery rooms,
thus further decreasing the wasting of resources,” he points out, “and FT
makes the center more proficient and able to see more patients.”
Anita Lambert-Gale, vice president of clinical operations, and John Snyders,
vice president of business operations, with Nashville, Tenn.-based HealthMark
Partners share some best practices for effective OR scheduling in an ASC. They
recommend scheduling the more predictable, shorter OR time cases in the early
morning because this practice will aid in keeping the OR schedule running more
on time. “Cases requiring long PACU times should be done in the morning so
these cases don’t unnecessarily keep PACU staff at the center into the evening
on overtime,” they observe, and “schedule the pediatric cases in the
morning,” they add.
Lambert-Gale and Snyders also say scheduling vertically, not linearly,
provides more efficiency, and they point out that opening six ORs to accommodate
six 7 a.m. requested surgery times is not efficient for the center if the rooms
will be severely underutilized later in the day.
Other strategies for effective scheduling include monitoring closely the
actual time a surgeon uses for various procedures. This will help in more
accurately booking OR time for that surgeon and streamlining OR activities. Guidelines concerning block times should be developed and upheld center-wide.
Lambert- Gale and Snyders advise the guidelines be developed quarterly, by the
board, and block time review and reallocation should be based on a calculated
utilization percentage.
Block time release guidelines can also prove imperative. The release should
be far enough out so that the center can still benefit from other physicians
scheduling into the released time, Lambert-Gale and Snyders point out. “In one facility the partners with the morning blocks blocked their cases
from the end time up,” they share. “With this practice, if the surgeon does
not fill the block fully, other surgeons are offered the start time of the day.
This practice helps alleviate the slow down in the middle of the day.”
One University of Iowa study explains further; noting that the timing of releasing OR time isn’t as important as other
contributing factors. The researchers examined the implications of releasing
allocated, but unfilled OR time to maximize OR efficiency.9 “We found that
postponing the decision of which service gets the new case until early the day
before surgery reduces over utilized OR time by less than 15 minutes per OR, per
day,” Franklin Dexter, the study’s lead researcher writes. “These results show that when OR time is released has a negligible effect
on OR efficiency. What matters much more is having the correct OR allocations and, if OR time
needs to be released, making that decision based on the scheduled workload.”
Other common problems encircling effective scheduling of the OR include
unutilized block time or gaps in scheduling that create staff down time,
physicians believing their required OR time per procedure is significantly less
than it actually is, everyone wanting a 7 a.m. start time, and scheduling
procedures at the same time that require the same equipment.
Lambert-Gale and Snyders offer the following tips to increase smooth
operations:
- Work on maintaining strong relationships and communication between ASC
and physician office schedulers. Consider inviting the scheduler or office
managers to a lunch meeting where issues can be discussed and relationships may
be built
- Keep physician office schedulers updated on the ASC policies,
provide an annual appreciation lunch, and invite them to the ASC • Make sure
your OR manager and surgery scheduler are communicating and respecting each
other
- Cross-train employees to help with room turnovers and create an
environment where team work is expected and appreciated
When implementing any
changes in an attempt to drive efficiency, Goldstein warns that patient safety
must remain the first thing that is being addressed. “As long as patient
safety is the first topic, efficiency and cost savings will be appropriately
addressed.”
Improving Clinical Operations
Improving clinical operations can overlap with improving business operations
in an ASC. The same processes that are valuable on the business side — valuation, accreditation, benchmarking, and education
— can reveal performance improvement areas on the clinical side.
Christy Cox, RN, administrator of the Institute for Outpatient Surgery LLC in
Columbia, Mo., comments first on education, saying, “First of all, education
in the medical field changes all the time, so you have to have your staff not
only reinforcing the basic-type clinical practices and standards but also
looking at the new technologies out there, and you need to provide staff and
physicians the tools to deal with those new processes.”
The ASC is a joint venture with physician owners, University of Missouri
Healthcare, and Nueterra Healthcare.
Accreditation, Cox says, is also critical to improving clinical aspects of
the center. “We were Joint Commission-accredited last year, and it has brought
so many people more on board for the patient safety issue. So much of becoming
accredited is relative to patient safety, to the outcomes any ASC wants to have.
We did so much work getting ready to become accredited. To watch the staff in
action, and seeing the physicians greeting patients and marking the site,
hearing the ‘time out’ and all the related processes that we use here,
including fire hazard vulnerability for each patient, is inspiring. I’m an RN,
but since I’ve become an administrator, I’m not as directly involved with
clinical as I used to be. Seeing this process, you think, ‘Wow, accreditation
is a great thing,’ because ultimately, with all these processes — some of
which we were doing before — we now have documentation that each room is doing
this. It clarifies to the staff and physician and our patients that we do care
about the safety issues.”
Cox notes that “improvement” is something that never ends — their
current improvements focus on medication management. “We are making sure there’s
a continuum of communications regarding all patient issues, but with a real
focus on medication management,” she attests. “That’s one of the national
patient safety goals with JCAHO this year, so seeing everybody getting involved,
and getting all the input from all the staff, that has been a process the staff
has welcomed here. Sometimes, you can get a little resistance – ‘Oooh,
accreditation time,’ — but we have lots of people involved in doing the
periodic performance review (PPR), and it’s exciting to see that people are
into this. We do feel we’re the best around, and we’re not only going to
maintain that, but also continue to make improvements. If issues arise, we’re
going to pick them apart and do investigations so that it can be better for the
next patient who comes along.”
Nurses at the center must maintain certain competencies that may not be
required by all the accrediting bodies. They are rotated through all areas of
the multi-specialty facility; they are also required to have basic advanced life
support (ALS) skills. All the RNs must be certified in advanced cardiac life
support (ACLS), and because the center also serves a large volume of pediatric
patients, the nurses are currently being rotated into certification for
pediatric advanced life support (PALS) as well.
Benchmarking is done in conjunction with Nueterra Healthcare, the facility’s
management company. “We also are a member of Surgical Outcomes Information
Exchange (SOIX), which is clinical-based, and that’s on a nationwide basis,”
Cox adds. “I just got my last report — we were looking at post-op stay
regarding length of time, because we’ve set our benchmark to be less than four
hours. Of course we look at different particular cases; we’re viewing knee
scopes, cataract removals, and tonsils with and without adenoid removal.”
Other factors measured include delays in discharge, complications, returns to
surgery, admissions to hospital, and pain episodes not relieved with some kind
of action. Of course, postoperative infections are also monitored; each physician has monthly reporting of all patients and the complications
they experienced. “Last year, we did 7,240 cases, and our percent for actual post-op
infection was 0.01 percent,” she observes.
Finally, Cox says, are physician proctor reviews. “When there is a
reappointment for a physician — which comes up every two years — we do a
thorough quality review, which includes the cases and allows us to see —
before I go to the CQI members for reappointment — if there are any trendings
going on that we need to address. That does help us improve or change anything
should we need to change anything to improve a process. Of course, for every
variance or incident report completed here, the person who discovers whatever
needs to be addressed, it’s given to the director of nurses, and she does the
investigation whether it’s in conjunction with other staff members or a
physician. It comes to me, and is also shared with Nueterra’s risk manager on
staff. Those things are all items that need to be there; we’re all human, and
everyone is capable of making a mistake. We want to know, and to put any
processes in place that we might need to.”
Another improvement may be seen by simply adding a short preliminary ASC
visit by the patient. A study in the journal Anesthesiology analyzed the
effect of preoperative clinic visits on OR cancellations and delays; the authors
found that a visit to an anesthesia preoperative medicine clinic (APMC) could
significantly impact case cancellations and delays on the day of surgery. 10
Medibis® provides data analysis services to ASCs; a recent product release
can assist ambulatory facilities in their clinical benchmarking. “The clinical benchmarking data cube, and the data that is tied with that
piece, is taken directly from the respective information systems used in the
surgery centers,” says Tyler D. Strain, vice president of business development
for Medibis. “It’s unique in the sense that the other benchmarking surveys
or initiatives are survey-driven, meaning that the data is dependent on somebody
at the other end who has to enter the data into a survey format. With Medibis,
we take the data directly from the information system, so it’s clean, good
data, not relying on somebody to fill out a survey tool, so there’s tremendous
value there, in the fact that the data has been validated, it’s directly at
the source system, and it’s what the individuals are using on a daily basis.”
The clinical cube measures many factors related to the clinical side of the
facility, adds Amy Hotwagner, manager of the Medibis surgery center solution
division. “They can see data by patient age; how long the geriatric patients
in, and pediatric patients; surgery time; total time in the ASC; recovery time;
anesthesia time; staff counts and staff time,” says Hotwagner.
One particularly intriguing measurement is staff time spent on each case. “We
have seen facilities that are running 6.2 average staff hours per case but with
only three people, whereas someone else may have fewer hours but more people,”
she adds. “The next generation of this cube will have clinical indicators,
complications, and complaints. What we see is that very few of our facilities
are actually putting that information in their source systems. We can benchmark across patient age, across specialties, across CPT codes,
anesthesia, and ASA status.”
The clinical cube is client-driven, Strain observes. “It’s based on the client needs; as more
clients see it and spend time with it, they’ll come up with other ways to
do clinical benchmarking,” he says.
M. Shane Foreman, president of Chicago, Ill.-based 3D Health Inc., notes that
certain “red flags” are particularly important in both clinical and business
operations. “Monitor the critical operating and performance indicators on a
monthly basis — overall trend in case volume, changes in case mix, percentage
of on time starts, OR turnover time, net revenue per case trend, variable
expense per case trend, trend in fixed operating expenses, and overall
profitability,” he says. Also, “Monitor patient and practicing physician satisfaction on an ongoing
basis — either monthly or quarterly. Move the center overhead to within
industry benchmarks — focus on reaching 75th percentile performance,” adds Foreman.
When change is anticipated, give employees a forewarning. “From the staff
perspective, there can be a lot of fear of the unknown. Open communication and feedback venues can help address these fears,” he
says. But keep in mind that implementation may not have immediate results, and
goal-setting should take this into account. “Sometimes, the physicians expect
rapid improvement that takes time to demonstrate and measure results. Clearly
articulating and setting realistic goals is important to set expectations and
timelines.”
Ergonomic Considerations
There is another way to improve clinical operations — by keeping the staff
healthy, uninjured, and fully able to perform their job duties. PHS West Inc.,
provides an ergonomic risk assessment report that can help identify recognized
workplace hazards; it also provides control strategies to reduce the risk of
injury to the employees performing those tasks. Acute injury is one concern;
however, a minor injury that continues recurring because of unresolved ergonomic
issues can eventually result in long-term, irreversible damage.
By identifying some common risk factors, the PHS West service can provide a
commonsense and cost-effective engineering control to reduce the risks of
employee injury related to push/pull force. In addition, a cost analysis is
provided to indicate the cost savings created by reducing the number of staff
members required to safely transport. PHS West provides carts and drive systems
to make transport of both patients and equipment within the ASC easier.
For example, employees may push or pull two carts weighing 550 pounds, fully
loaded with equipment, eight times each week. The average distance per round
trip is 1,200 feet. Sometimes, the employee duplicates the stressors within one hour with a
return trip. During transport, the employee must push the cart on carpeted hallways,
negotiate steering control on straight run and cornering, maneuver over
elevator/doorway thresholds, move up and down ramps, and frequently stop and
start. Awkward postures such as twisting, turning, and improper body mechanics
are being used to maintain operational control, movement, and braking of the
cart.
Upon evaluation, these various movements are thought to increase the employee’s
risk of injury. The solution is to train the employee in workplace hazards and
in the risks of material handling tasks, add more staff members, or take more
trips with lighter loads. The engineering solution, however, is to utilize a
motorized cart or drive system, which can be retrofitted to an existing cart.
References
1.) Cendan JC, Good M. Interdisciplinary work flow assessment and redesign
decreases operating room turnover time and allows for additional caseload. Arch
Surg. 2006 Jan;141(1):65-9; discussion 70.
2.) Christian CK, et al. A prospective study of patient safety in the
operating room. Surgery. 2006 Feb;139(2):159-73.
3.) Moss J, Xiao Y. Improving operating room coordination: communication
pattern assessment. J Nurs Adm. 2004 Feb;34(2):93-100.
4.) Friedman DM, et al. Increasing operating room efficiency through parallel
processing. Ann Surg. 2006 Jan;243(1):10-4.
5.) Hanss R, et al. Overlapping induction of anesthesia: an analysis of
benefits and costs. Anesthesiology. 2005 Aug;103(2):391-400.
6.) Sandberg WS, et al. Deliberate perioperative systems design improves
operating room throughput. Anesthesiology. 2005 Aug;103(2):406-18.
7.) Jevtovic-Todorovic V. Standards of care for ambulatory surgery. Are we up
to speed. Minerva Anestesiol. 2006 Jan-Feb;72(1-2):13-20.
8.) Song D, et al. Fast-tracking (bypassing the PACU) does not reduce nursing
workload after ambulatory surgery. Br J Anaesth. 2004 Dec;93(6):768-74.
Epub 2004 Sep 17.
9.) Dexter F, Macario A. When to release allocated operating room time to
increase operating room efficiency. Anesth Analg. 2004 Mar;98(3):758-62,
table of contents.
10.) Ferschl MB, Tung A, Sweitzer B, Huo D, Glick DB. Preoperative clinic
visits reduce operating room cancellations and delays. Anesthesiology.
2005 Oct;103(4):855-9.
Reducing Turnover in Anesthesia
Somnia Inc. implements the following anesthesia-related procedures in its
partner centers to increase OR efficiency and reduce turnover time:
Promote regional anesthesia: There is an enormous upside to regional
anesthesia. No. 1 is being able to put the block in prior to the surgery, No. 2
is the decreased reliance on general anesthesia or the depth of anesthesia in
the OR can be lessened if a patient has received a regional anesthetic. Patients
go home pain-free and patient satisfaction is improved. So the increased
utilization of regional anesthesia — when it is appropriate — is an
important thing.
Choice of anesthetics: Providing ambulatory anesthesia is certainly a
different skill set focusing on assuring patients wake up lucent with the
appropriate amount of anesthetic, the appropriate attention to pain, nausea,
vomiting, and shorter-acting anesthesia.
The facilitator model: The facilitator model is the utilization of an
additional either anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist. One additional provider
more than the center needs. And that anthologist or certified registered nurse
anesthetist (CRNA) is used to facilitate pre-op interview with patients, to
oversee the recovery rooms, to ensure patients are being treated appropriately
and discharged efficiently. In addition, that facilitator will be responsible
for providing the regional blocks. So if the anthologist is already in room one
and they have to come out and do their regional anesthesia block on the patient
before coming back into the room, that is not going to be very time efficient.
Source: Robert Goldstein, MD, executive vice president and chief medical
officer of Somnia, Inc.
|
|