Abstract

BackgroundLean is commonly adopted in healthcare to increase quality of care and efficiency. Few studies of Lean involve staff-related outcomes, and few have a longitudinal design. Thus, the aim was to examine the extent to which changes over time in Lean maturity are associated with changes over time in care-giving, thriving and exhaustion, as perceived by staff, with a particular emphasis on the extent to which job demands and job resources, as perceived by staff, have a moderated mediation effect.MethodA longitudinal study with a correlational design was used. In total, 260 staff at 46 primary care units responded to a web survey in 2015 and 2016. All variables in the study were measured using staff ratings. Ratings of Lean maturity reflect participants’ judgements regarding the entire unit; ratings of care-giving, thriving, exhaustion and job demands and resources reflect participants’ judgements regarding their own situation.ResultsFirst, over time, increased Lean maturity was associated with increased staff satisfaction with their care-giving and increased thriving, mediated by increased job resources. Second, over time, increased Lean maturity was associated with decreased staff exhaustion, mediated by decreased job demands. No evidence was found showing that job demands and job resources had a moderated mediation effect.ConclusionThe results indicate that primary care staff may benefit from working in organizations characterized by high levels of Lean maturity and that caregiving may also be improved as perceived by staff.

Highlights

  • Lean is commonly adopted in healthcare to increase quality of care and efficiency

  • The results indicate that primary care staff may benefit from working in organizations characterized by high levels of Lean maturity and that caregiving may be improved as perceived by staff

  • Moderated mediation in the models associated with H1, H2 and H3 No support was found for job demands or job resources having a moderated mediation effect in the models

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lean is commonly adopted in healthcare to increase quality of care and efficiency. Reviews have reported improved staff and patient satisfaction as well as decreased errors and patient mortality after adoption. The present study is based on Liker’s [14] description, according to which Lean involves 14 principles combined in a 4P model: Philosophy, Processes, People and partners, and Problem-solving. Philosophy refers to, for instance, Kaltenbrunner et al BMC Health Services Research (2019) 19:652 having long-term goals, focusing on customer needs and having engaged staff. Problem-solving includes staff continuously improving care processes. According to Liker [14], if set goals are to be achieved, Lean needs to be adopted system wide, involve all Lean principles and all staff members. Review papers in healthcare have shown that Lean has most often been only partially adopted [1, 2, 9]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call