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The Lean Post / Articles / Transforming Healthcare is Complex, Start with a Model Cell

Transforming Healthcare is Complex, Start with a Model Cell

Executive Leadership

Transforming Healthcare is Complex, Start with a Model Cell

By John Toussaint

April 3, 2014

John Toussaint from the ThedaCare Center for Healthcare Value explains what he's learned about how meaningful organizational change happens from visiting and working with over 130 healthcare organizations in 12 different countries, all with their own unique problems and challenges.

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I’ve now visited over 130 healthcare organizations in 12 countries and seen many different approaches to lean transformation. What have I learned? If I were to begin another lean transformation today, in a healthcare organization or anywhere else, the first thing I’d do is work with my team to develop a model cell.

The model cell approach is best thought of as “an inch wide and a mile deep” (in contrast to an inch deep and a mile wide). We started our journey at Thedacare with this approach. In other words we did a lot of kaizen and a lot of value stream mapping. But in most cases our work was not tied to the important business goals of the organization. And since we didn’t have any knowledge of the management system required to sustain improvement or build a continuous improvement culture, most of our early work was for naught. In the early days we joked that we did a lot of “drive by Kaizen,” which was actually detrimental to our transformation.

At the ThedaCare Center for Healthcare Value we’ve been observing organizational transformations in healthcare, focusing lately on this question of “where do you start?” At the recent Lean Transformation Summit, John Shook and the team at the Lean Enterprise Institute explained how they’ve been studying lean transformation at a few different partner companies. Shook has identified five important questions:

  • What is our purpose or what problem are we trying to solve? (What value do we create)?
  • How do we improve the actual work?
  • How do we develop the people?
  • What role must leadership take, and how does the management system support this new way of working?
  • What basic thinking or assumptions underlie this transformation?

We start with this first question: “What is the business problem we must solve?” Then we apply lean tools and principles to create a model cell. Again, the key is tying that work to the business goals of the organization. This model cell experiment—tied to key performance targets—creates a new system with standard work that sustains improvement and aligns everyone on larger organizational goals.

Why build the model cell? First, it’s the best way to help people learn. In the process creating teams, people learn the tools, principles, and management system behaviors and characteristics required for transformation. Second, a model cell is the best way to help the organization learn; you want to use the model cell to show the rest of the organization what good looks like. This is the first step in “spread.” Spreading lean thinking or any improvement isn’t easy. But without a model cell, it’s impossible. The power of being able to go see a totally new way of doing things or approach to problem solving in your own organization cannot be underestimated. The model cell becomes the learning center for the organization. It creates the excitement within teams that fundamental change can occur and be sustained, and it lays the ground work for the next model cells that will solve other business problems.

The model cell approach requires senior leadership involvement and committed of resources from senior leadership. It’s most likely to be successful with a senior management sponsor. Depending on the business problem, putting together the model cell can take months. In our case, the redesign of inpatient care at ThedaCare took 6 months to design and 11 months to study, but then it led to zero medication reconciliation errors and 25% reduction in total cost of care. We’ve maintained these numbers for several years now with total cost per case running at $6,000 compared to average in the U.S. of $9,700. Read more about this project here.

The Lean Healthcare Transformation Summit this year (June 4-5 in LA) will focus on the “how to” aspect of transforming healthcare organizations. We’re proud to feature speakers such as John Shook and Kim Barnas who have both been deeply involved in exactly these kinds of transformations. John Shook, at Toyota and many other manufacturing and service organizations. Kim Barnas, at Thedacare where she led a team in creating the core components of a lean management system for healthcare. And I’ll be discussing the “how” from a senior leadership strategy perspective. Join us!

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Written by:

John Toussaint

About John Toussaint

John is an Internist, former healthcare CEO, and is one of the foremost figures in the adoption of organizational excellence principles in healthcare. He founded Catalysis a nonprofit education institute in 2008.  Catalysis has launched peer-to-peer learning networks, developed in-depth workshops, and created many products – including books, DVDs, and webinars.

In addition, Catalysis was a founding member of the Center for Lean Engagement and Research (CLEAR) at U.C. Berkeley. Catalysis sponsors the Lean Healthcare Transformation Summit each year – both in the U.S. and in Europe. The Catalysis team has built C-suite coaching capability and partners with many organizations throughout the world advancing healthcare value by supporting teams that are transforming healthcare delivery.

He was the founding chair of the Wisconsin Collaborative for Healthcare Quality and of the Wisconsin Health Information Organization, as well as the non-executive leader of the Partnership for Healthcare Payment Reform in Wisconsin. He has participated in Institute of Medicine subcommittees and has directly worked with CMS leaders to broaden their understanding of lean for government.

Dr. Toussaint’s healthcare improvement work has been well documented in articles published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings, Health Affairs, The Journal of Patient Safety, The Journal of Healthcare Management, Healthcare: The Journal of Delivery Science and Innovation, Harvard Business Review and Frontiers in Health Services Management. His work on payment reform and the transparency of provider performance data has been featured in The American Journal of Managed Care, The Journal of the American Medical Association, Health Affairs, and the Commonwealth Fund publications.  News publications such as TIME, The Wall Street Journal, the CNBC Blog, The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and Healthcare Finance News have featured articles about Dr. Toussaint’s work.

Dr. Toussaint has been recognized for his work in transforming healthcare by organizations including The Business Healthcare Group of Wisconsin, which awarded him the “Driving Meaningful Change” award in 2014, The Association of Manufacturing Excellence (AME), which inducted him into its 2012 Hall of Fame, and the Jon M. Huntsman School of Business at Utah State University, which hosts the Shingo Prize for Organizational Excellence. Dr. Toussaint was named a lifetime member of the Shingo Academy in 2011. Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle also honored Dr. Toussaint with a Certificate of Commendation for Innovation from the State of Wisconsin in 2005. Dr. Toussaint is also the winner of ACHE’s 2014 Dean Conley Award for his article “A Management, Leadership and Board Road Map to Transforming Care for Patients,” published in the Spring 2013 issue of Frontiers of Health Services Management. He is also the recipient of the 2018 Cornell College Leadership and Service Award.

Dr. Toussaint has been a featured speaker at the Association for Manufacturing Excellence, The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, The Shingo Prize, The Lean Enterprise Institute, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and many international conferences. He has presented extensively to legislators, Medicare leaders, and government staff on the topic of healthcare value.

Dr. Toussaint has written three books all of which have received the prestigious Shingo Research and Publication Award. His groundbreaking first book, On the Mend: Revolutionizing Healthcare to Save Lives and Transform the Industry reveals how healthcare can be fundamentally improved at the point of delivery using the proven principles of enterprise excellence. His second book, Potent Medicine: The Collaborative Cure for Healthcare, describes the three core elements necessary to transform healthcare and deliver better value; delivery of care designed around the patient; transparency of treatment quality and cost; and payment for outcomes. His third book, Management on the Mend: The Executive Guide to System Transformation is a study of eleven organizations and the successful attempts to apply enterprise excellence principles in healthcare.

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