{domain:"www.qualitydigest.com",server:"169.47.211.87"} Skip to main content

User account menu
Main navigation
  • Topics
    • Customer Care
    • FDA Compliance
    • Healthcare
    • Innovation
    • Lean
    • Management
    • Metrology
    • Operations
    • Risk Management
    • Six Sigma
    • Standards
    • Statistics
    • Supply Chain
    • Sustainability
    • Training
  • Videos/Webinars
    • All videos
    • Product Demos
    • Webinars
  • Advertise
    • Advertise
    • Submit B2B Press Release
    • Write for us
  • Metrology Hub
  • Training
  • Subscribe
  • Log in
Mobile Menu
  • Home
  • Topics
    • 3D Metrology-CMSC
    • Customer Care
    • FDA Compliance
    • Healthcare
    • Innovation
    • Lean
    • Management
    • Metrology
    • Operations
    • Risk Management
    • Six Sigma
    • Standards
    • Statistics
    • Supply Chain
    • Sustainability
    • Training
  • Login / Subscribe
  • More...
    • All Features
    • All News
    • All Videos
    • Contact
    • Training

Is There a Solution to the Challenges in Healthcare?

A solution has been identified, and here is help to make the change

Robert Fangmeyer
Mon, 06/09/2014 - 19:34
  • Comment
  • RSS

Social Sharing block

  • Print
  • Add new comment
Body

What does healthcare in the United States need? Well, according to a report released May 29, 2014, by the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST), U.S. healthcare organizations need “systems engineering.”

ADVERTISEMENT

In their letter to President Obama, PCAST co-chairs John Holdren and Eric Lander state that “systems engineering, widely used in manufacturing and aviation, is an interdisciplinary approach to analyze, design, manage, and measure a complex system in order to improve its efficiency, reliability, productivity, quality, and safety.”

In other words, healthcare organizations, including hospitals and community-based providers, need to manage their operations as an integrated whole rather than as a set of discrete components. They need to design, implement, measure, analyze, and manage their operations as one system if they want to simultaneously improve their operations, finances, and patient outcomes.

 …

Want to continue?
Log in or create a FREE account.
Enter your username or email address
Enter the password that accompanies your username.
By logging in you agree to receive communication from Quality Digest. Privacy Policy.
Create a FREE account
Forgot My Password

Comments

Submitted by knowwareman on Mon, 06/09/2014 - 10:24

Systems Engineering in Healthcare is Overkill

When I think of Systems Engineering, I think of my college degrees in operations research and all of the crazy analysis we did.

Having worked with numerous hospitals over the last decade, I have found that a little Value Stream Mapping or Spaghetti Diagramming will quickly discover ways to cut nurse travel time by 50% in almost any nursing unit and lab turnaround times by 30-50%. They can shorten turnaround times from admission to imaging to lab to discharge.

And it only takes an hour or two with a pad of Post-it Notes to figure out what to change and how.Implementation, of course, may take a little longer, but sometimes machines and materials can be moved immediately.

I worked with an architecture firm to design Lean rural hospitals from the ground up. Many existing hospitals were not designed well, but can be optimized.

Systems Engineering is overkill for Healthcare. Value Stream Maps and Spaghetti Diagrams are simple solutions to what ails Healthcare today.

  • Reply

Submitted by Tom Pyzdek on Mon, 06/09/2014 - 14:51

With all due respect, what

With all due respect, what you're describing IS systems engineering. Minus a lot of the fancier stuff systems engineers do, but there's room for those things too in a multi-trillion dollar industry.
  • Reply

Submitted by Stan Konwiser on Fri, 06/13/2014 - 12:07

The healthcare solutions are on their way...

Robert is correct: Systems Engineering will be able to vastly improve health care delivery. But the missing element is the data needed to apply those systems. Our healthcare system is based on trying to improve the outcomes of already sick people and the aggregated data starting point is when people get sick. On the horizon is a non-invasive diagnostic tool that will test the breath of healthy as well as sick people to develop Big Data which will allow identification of disease precursors. As this diagnostic test screens the many chemicals in exhaled breath at very low cost, test results can be accumulated into databases for analysis to determine who might be developing diseases long before actual symptoms appear. This testing can reveal numerous diseases from cancer to diabetes.

The device that can do the breath analysis is the Owlstone Lonestar which is a miniature FAIMS Mass Spectrometer developed by Owlstone Nanotech. You can read about the development of this technology here: http://www.owlstonenanotech.com/applications/medical

With the creation of Big Data on a large population, preventative medicine will allow our heathcare system to get ahead of disease and serve primarily prevention rather than only remediation. That we know is the primary path to quality improvement.

  • Reply

Add new comment

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
Please login to comment.
      

© 2025 Quality Digest. Copyright on content held by Quality Digest or by individual authors. Contact Quality Digest for reprint information.
“Quality Digest" is a trademark owned by Quality Circle Institute Inc.

footer
  • Home
  • Print QD: 1995-2008
  • Print QD: 2008-2009
  • Videos
  • Privacy Policy
  • Write for us
footer second menu
  • Subscribe to Quality Digest
  • About Us
  • Contact Us