Abstract

Process improvement is a skill all physicians need to be familiar with. This is particularly true for surgeons, who work in complex systems requiring multidisciplinary care in the health care system’s most expensive location: the operating room. Surgical leaders need to be familiar with the techniques and themes of process improvement. The current literature suggests that formal process improvement programs can be effective in improving clinical, operational, and financial performance of hospitals. This review outlines a general approach to process improvement, in addition to providing evidence for the efficacy of process improvement in health care, a definition of processes, and the history of process improvement. Tables outline forms of waste applied to health care and heuristic approaches to project improvement. Figures include a project charter, control chart, X-bar control chart, Pareto table and chart, Fishbone cause-and-effect diagram, diagrams of the Plan-Do-Study-Act process and cost/payoff matrix, statistical software control charts, and process flow maps. This review contains 10 figures, 3 tables, and 22 references Keywords: Operating room, surgery, surgical leader, multidisciplinary team, waste, project carter, control chart, Pareto table, health care improvement

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