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Int J Health Care Qual Assur · Jan 2009
Historical ArticleFrank Gilbreth and health care delivery method study driven learning.
- Denis R Towill.
- Logistics Systems Dynamics Group, Cardiff Business School, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK. adamse27@Cardiff.ac.uk
- Int J Health Care Qual Assur. 2009 Jan 1; 22 (4): 417-40.
PurposeThe purpose of this article is to look at method study, as devised by the Gilbreths at the beginning of the twentieth century, which found early application in hospital quality assurance and surgical "best practice". It has since become a core activity in all modern methods, as applied to healthcare delivery improvement programmes.Design/Methodology/ApproachThe article traces the origin of what is now currently and variously called "business process re-engineering", "business process improvement" and "lean healthcare" etc., by different management gurus back to the century-old pioneering work of Frank Gilbreth. The outcome is a consistent framework involving "width", "length" and "depth" dimensions within which healthcare delivery systems can be analysed, designed and successfully implemented to achieve better and more consistent performance.FindingsHealthcare method (saving time plus saving motion) study is best practised as co-joint action learning activity "owned" by all "players" involved in the re-engineering process. However, although process mapping is a key step forward, in itself it is no guarantee of effective re-engineering. It is not even the beginning of the end of the change challenge, although it should be the end of the beginning. What is needed is innovative exploitation of method study within a healthcare organisational learning culture accelerated via the Gilbreth Knowledge Flywheel.Research Limitations/ImplicationsIt is shown that effective healthcare delivery pipeline improvement is anchored into a team approach involving all "players" in the system especially physicians. A comprehensive process study, constructive dialogue, proper and highly professional re-engineering plus managed implementation are essential components. Experience suggests "learning" is thereby achieved via "natural groups" actively involved in healthcare processes.Originality/ValueThe article provides a proven method for exploiting Gilbreths' outputs and their many successors in enabling more productive evidence-based healthcare delivery as summarised in the "learn-do-learn-do" feedback loop in the Gilbreth Knowledge Flywheel.
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