Abstract

The load on health systems caused by systemic overburden leads to heightened costs, longer waiting times, a reduced quality of care, andassociated problems. This may be caused by ’failure demand’; however, its definition is inadequate for a complex hierarchical system. Although accounting for a significant proportion of load in other industries, the academic assessment of failure demand in health care remains limited. We present a novel way of identifying repeat consumption, which we loosely equate with failure demand. We present a framework that can be used to identify ‘system failure’, the trigger for later repeat consumption. This provides new insight into understanding whether common events represent system failure. A diagnostic framework was developed from observations, the literature, and brainstorming. Commonly observed exit scenarios in health care were tested against the framework to create a system-failure list. The framework and the categorisation table were shared with eight international Lean health-care experts. Following feedback, the framework and categorisations were fine-tuned and consensus was achieved via member-checking. Identifying and managing failure demand for these settings can lead to a reduced system load, thus reducing costs and increasing system efficiency and quality.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Study context The genesis of this study lies in trying to understand the phenomenon of failure demand, how it presents in health systems, and the impact that this has on service delivery.The first publication in a series of three publications identified five demand modalities in health systems, of which failure demand was one

  • We propose that chronic care is not a system failure because the purpose of such care is not striving for a cure, but rather prioritising management of an ongoing condition [10]

  • Not system failure — scientific limitations may limit the ability of medicine to cure. 4.2.3 Trial and error medicine We view trial and error medicine as a nuanced type of experimental medicine

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Study context The genesis of this study lies in trying to understand the phenomenon of failure demand, how it presents in health systems, and the impact that this has on service delivery.The first publication in a series of three publications (shown in Figure 1) identified five demand modalities in health systems, of which failure demand was one. 1.1 Study context The genesis of this study lies in trying to understand the phenomenon of failure demand, how it presents in health systems, and the impact that this has on service delivery. Recognising that there are gaps in defining and identifying failure demand in more complex hierarchical organisations, a greater depth of investigation was required. This paper forms the second part of a larger study that was conducted with the intention to understand certain aspects of demand in health systems. We summarise our findings with a list of events that could be root causes of failure demand. One of the categories responsible for failure demand identified in this paper — poor supply chain management — was explored in greater depth in an empirical study of a national pharmaceutical supply chain in a developing country

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