Assignment 3: Report to the Board - Operations Management
FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS EXACTLY AS IT STATES. AND USE THE FIRMAT BELOW AS SHOWN IN THE INSTRUCTIONS. AND ALWAYS WORK ACCORDING TO THE GRADING RUBRIC.
NO PLAGIARISM.
READ THE SCENARIO
You are a healthcare consultant with a background in organizational development and change
management. You have been hired by a healthcare organization, to help them develop a
strategy to address a current crisis or challenge that is negatively impacting standards of care,
outcomes, and the patient experience. After doing your research, you will write a short, memo style
report, to be presented to the Board of Directors at their upcoming meeting.
Topic
You may pick your own topic for this assignment, but it must fit within this overall definition: a
crisis or challenge that is negatively impacting standards of care, outcomes, and the patient
experience in a healthcare workplace.
There are two ways that you may identify your topic:
• If applicable, you may pick a crisis or challenge within your own current or past
healthcare workplace.
O Sample crises and challenges: COVID-19, weather emergency, staffing shortage, layoffs,
financial crisis, merger, or acquisition, etc.
• If you do not have a healthcare workplace example, search for an article about a
relevant crisis or challenge. Be sure to include a link to the article in your references.
O Suggested sources: The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Business Week, The Economist,
Modern Healthcare, The Journal of the American Medical Association, and any other
professional journal or publication.
O You may also find useful material on the following websites: American Hospital
Association (www.aha.org), American College of Healthcare Executives (www.ache.org), and The
American Public Health Association (www.apha.org).
Your Assignment:
Based on your chosen topic, write a concise, memo-style report to the Board of 2 to 3 pages.
Your report must include the following four sections:
O Executive Summary
· Briefly describe the healthcare organization concerned, including its
location, size, major products or services, the community it serves, etc.
· Provide a clear and concise description of the crisis or challenge faced by
the organization.
II. Assessment of the Issue
Indicate current and expected future effects of the crisis or challenge on these areas:
· Standards of care and outcomes
· The patient experience
· Facility staff (to include medical staff)
· Other internal and external stakeholders
· Financial health of the organization
Note: In preparing for this section, you may wish to conduct a SWOT analysis
III. Recommendation
Describe an actionable strategy to address the crisis or challenge, including:
· Major actionable steps of the strategy
· Timeline to implement these steps
· Resources, including staff time, materials, facilities, financial
considerations, etc.
IV. Outcomes and Measures
Describe the expected results and outcomes of the strategy, and indicate how
success will be measured. This section should answer these questions:
· How will your recommended actions impact the patient experience?
· What data will be needed to measure these results and impacts?
· What is the next step if the plan does not achieve its desired effect?
Formatting
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
• Typed, double-spaced, using Times New Roman or Ariel font (size 11 or 12), with one-inch margins
on all sides.
• The body of your report must not exceed 3 pages in length.
• In place of a Cover page, provide the following Headings on Page 1 of your report:
· TO: Insert Professor’s Name
· FROM: Insert Your Name
· DATE: Insert Assignment’s Due Date
· RE: Report to the Board
Citations and references must follow the formatting instructions found in the JWMI
Writing Standards Guide. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
Note: The Headings and References pages are not included in the required assignment page length.
Assignment 3: Report to the Board
Scenario
You are a healthcare consultant with a background in organizational development and change
management. You have been hired by a healthcare organization, to help them develop a
strategy to address a current crisis or challenge that is negatively impacting standards of care,
outcomes, and the patient experience. After doing your research, you will write a short, memo style report, to be presented to the Board of Directors at their upcoming meeting.
Topic
You may pick your own topic for this assignment, but it must fit within this overall definition: a
crisis or challenge that is negatively impacting standards of care, outcomes, and the patient
experience in a healthcare workplace.
There are two ways that you may identify your topic:
• If applicable, you may pick a crisis or challenge within your own current or past
healthcare workplace.
· Sample crises and challenges: COVID-19, weather emergency, staffing shortage, layoffs,
financial crisis, merger, or acquisition, etc.
• If you do not have a healthcare workplace example, search for an article about a
relevant crisis or challenge. Be sure to include a link to the article in your references.
· Suggested sources: The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Business Week, The Economist,
Modern Healthcare, The Journal of the American Medical Association, and any other
professional journal or publication.
· You may also find useful material on the following websites: American Hospital
Association (www.aha.org), American College of Healthcare Executives (www.ache.org), and The American Public Health Association (www.apha.org).
Please contact your instructor if you need help to select a topic.
Your Assignment:
Based on your chosen topic, write a concise, memo-style report to the Board of 2 to 3 pages.
Your report must include the following four sections:
· Executive Summary
· Briefly describe the healthcare organization concerned, including its
location, size, major products or services, the community it serves, etc.
· Provide a clear and concise description of the crisis or challenge faced by
the organization.
· II. Assessment of the Issue
Indicate current and expected future effects of the crisis or challenge on these areas:
· Standards of care and outcomes
· The patient experience
· Facility staff (to include medical staff)
· Other internal and external stakeholders
· Financial health of the organization
Note: In preparing for this section, you may wish to conduct a SWOT analysis
· III. Recommendation
Describe an actionable strategy to address the crisis or challenge, including:
· Major actionable steps of the strategy
· Timeline to implement these steps
· Resources, including staff time, materials, facilities, financial
considerations, etc.
· IV. Outcomes and Measures
Describe the expected results and outcomes of the strategy, and indicate how
success will be measured. This section should answer these questions:
· How will your recommended actions impact the patient experience?
· What data will be needed to measure these results and impacts?
· What is the next step if the plan does not achieve its desired effect?
Formatting
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
• Typed, double-spaced, using Times New Roman or Ariel font (size 11 or 12), with one-inch margins on all sides.
• The body of your report must not exceed 3 pages in length.
• In place of a Cover page, provide the following Headings on Page 1 of your report:
· TO: Insert Professor’s Name
· FROM: Insert Your Name
· DATE: Insert Assignment’s Due Date
· RE: Report to the Board
Citations and references must follow the formatting instructions found in the JWMI
Writing Standards Guide. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
Note: The Headings and References pages are not included in the required assignment page length.
RUBRIC - Assignment 3: Report to the Board
Criteria
Unsatisfactory
Low Pass
Pass
High Pass
Honors
1. Provide a clear and concise description of the organization and the crisis or challenge that it faces. Weight: 20\%
Does not provide or inadequately provides a description of the organization and the crisis or challenge. Not at all clear or concise.
Provides a partial description of the organization and the crisis or challenge. Not fully clear and concise.
Provides a satisfactory description of the organization and the crisis or challenge. Clear and concise.
Provides a very good description of the organization and the crisis or challenge. Very clear and concise.
Provides an exemplary description of the organization and the crisis or challenge. Excellent level of clarity and conciseness.
2. Write an impact assessment that includes current and expected future effects on standards of care, the patient experience, facility staff, other stakeholders, and financial health of the organization. Weight: 20\%
Does not assess the current or expected future effects on standards of care and outcomes, the patient experience, facility staff, other stakeholders, and financial health of the organization.
Partially assesses the current and/or expected future effects on standards of care and outcomes, the patient experience, facility staff, other stakeholders, and financial health of the organization.
Satisfactorily assesses the current and expected future effects on standards of care and outcomes, the patient experience, facility staff, other stakeholders, and financial health of the organization.
Writes a very good assessment of the current and expected future effects on standards of care and outcomes, the patient experience, facility staff, other stakeholders, and financial health of the organization
Writes an exemplary assessment of the current and expected future effects on standards of care and outcomes, the patient experience, facility staff, other stakeholders, and financial health of the organization.
3. Describe a recommended, actionable strategy to address the crisis or challenge, including details about major steps, timeline, and resources needed. Weight: 20\%
Does not describe or inadequately provides an actionable strategy to address the crisis or challenge with minimal detail about major steps, timeline, and resources needed.
Describes a partial, but incomplete, actionable strategy to address the crisis or challenge, with limited details about major steps, timeline, and resources needed.
Satisfactorily describes an actionable strategy to address the crisis or challenge, with adequate details about major steps, timeline, and resources needed.
Describes a very good, actionable strategy to address the crisis or challenge with clear details about major steps, timeline, and resources needed.
Describes an exemplary and actionable strategy to address the crisis or challenge, with excellent details about major steps, timeline, and resources needed.
4. Describe the expected results of the strategy, indicate how success will be measured, and describe the next step if the plan does not achieve the desired effect. Weight: 20\%
Does not describe or inadequately describes the expected results of the strategy, and/or does not indicate how success will be measured, and/or fails to describe the next step if the plan does not achieve the desired effect.
Partially describes the expected results of the strategy and/or partially indicates how success will be measured, and/or partially describes the next step if the plan does not achieve the desired effect.
Satisfactorily describes the expected results of the strategy, indicates how success will be measured, and describes an adequate next step if the plan does not achieve the desired effect.
Provides a very good description of the expected results of the strategy, indicates clearly how success will be measured, and describes a good next step if the plan does not achieve the desired effect.
Provides an exemplary description of the expected results of the strategy, indicates very well how success will be measured, and describes an excellent next step if the plan does not achieve the desired effect.
5. Clarity, Logic, Writing Mechanics, Grammar, and Formatting. Weight: 20\%
Multiple mechanical errors: much of the report is difficult to understand or the text does not flow; student fails to follow the formatting instructions.
Mechanical errors make the report difficult for the reader to understand; text does not flow; includes unsupported conclusions and assertions.
Some mechanical errors: text flow is satisfactory; report is mostly clear; assertions and conclusions are generally justified and explained.
Few mechanical errors; text flows well; report clearly expresses the student’s ideas in a manner that logically develops the topics.
Minimal minor mechanical errors; text flows very well; report clearly expresses the student’s ideas in an exemplary manner that logically develops the topics.
THIRD EDITION
Health Care
Operations
Managemen
t
A SYSTEMS PERSPECTIVE
James R. Langabeer II, PhD,
MBA, FACHE
Professor of Healthcare Management
and Informatics,
University of Texas Health Science
Center
Jeffrey Helton, PhD, CMA,
CFE, FHFMA
Associate Professor of Healthcare
Management,
Metropolitan State University of Denver
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-
Publication Data
Names: Langabeer, James R., II, 1969-
author. | Helton, Jeffrey, 1961-author.
Title: Health care operations management: a
systems perspective / James Langabeer II,
Jeffrey Helton.
Description: Third edition. | Burlington, MA :
Jones & Bartlett Learning, [2021] | Includes
bibliographical references
and index. | Summary: “This book
provides a well-rounded, comprehensive
treaty on all aspects of operations
management specific to the healthcare
industry. It covers everything from hospital
finances to project management,
patient flows, performance management,
process improvement, and supply chain
management”— Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019039957 (print) | LCCN
2019039958 (ebook) | ISBN 9781284194142
(paperback) | ISBN 9781284194173 (ebook)
Subjects: MESH: Hospital Administration—
methods | Efficiency, Organizational
Classification: LCC RA971 (print) | LCC
RA971 (ebook) | NLM WX 157.1 | DDC
362.11068—dc23
LC record available at
https://lccn.loc.gov/2019039957
LC ebook record available at
https://lccn.loc.gov/2019039958
6048
Printed in the United States of America
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Contents
Preface
About the Authors
New to the Third Edition
PART I: An Overview to Healthcare
Operations
Chapter 1 Operations Management
and Decision-Making
A Systems Approach
The Healthcare Industry
Defining Operations Management
Key Functions of Healthcare
Operations Management
The Need for Operations Management
Goals of the Operations Manager
Competitive Advantage of Operations
Factors Driving Increased Healthcare
Costs
Learning from Other Industries
Principles of Management
The Scientific and Mathematical
Schools of Management
Management Decision-Making
Power and Decision-Making in Health
Care
The Role of Technology and Systems
Trends in Operations Management
Best Practices for Successful
Operations Managers
Tips for Success
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
Chapter 2 Hospitals and the
Healthcare Industry
Hospitals Are Big Business
What Is a Hospital?
Teaching Hospitals
Hospital Business Operations
Hospital Policies and Regulations
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
References
Chapter 3 Operational Finance
How Hospitals Are Paid
From Retrospective to Prospective
Profit Margins
Income Statements
Income Statement Ratio Analysis
Balance Sheet
Working Capital
Other Financial Ratios
Cash Flow Statement
Audited Financial Statements
Debt in Health Care
Implications for Operations and
Logistics Management
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
Chapter 4 Health Plan Operations
What Are Health Plans?
The Basics of Health Insurance
Key Operational Functions in Health
Insurance Plans
Sales, Enrollment, and Member
Services
Network Management and Provider
Services
Medical Management
Claims Processing
Operational Impacts of Health
Insurance Payment Methods
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
PART II: Methods for Improving
Operations
Chapter 5 Operational Planning
and Analysis
Why Plan?
The Planning Process
Analyze Operations and Environment
Generate Strategic Alternatives
Breakeven Analysis
Implement, Measure, and Revise
Return on Investment
Capital Investment Models in Health
Care
The Politics of Capital Investment
Recommendations
Validating ROI at Multiple Stages
Calculating Return on Investment
Time Value of Money
Calculating Multiple Cash Flows
Other ROI Techniques
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
Chapter 6 Quality and Process
Management
Quality
Choices for Operations Management
Tools and Techniques
Process
Process Maps
Process Improvement Methodology
Improving Service Quality
Key Questions to Promote Dramatic
Changes
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
References
Chapter 7 Six Sigma and Lean
Management
Six Sigma
Modeling Six Sigma Processes
DMAIC
Data Types
Lean Management
Data
Comparing Six Sigma to Lean
Common Principles of Both Lean and
Six Sigma
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
References
Chapter 8 Forecasting and
Decision Tools
Data-Driven Decisions
Quantitative Tools
De-Bottlenecking
Forecasting Patient Demand and
Volumes
Forecasting Using Product Life Cycles
Product Usage Patterns
Basic Principles of Forecasting
Capacity Analysis
Capacity Planning: Aligning Capacity
with Demand
Minimizing Wait Times
Time and Motion Studies
Improving Flows with Tracking
Systems
Bar Codes
Radio Frequency Identification
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
Chapter 9 Productivity and
Performance
Management
The Quest for Productivity
Measurement Issues
Single Versus Multiple Factors
Common Hospital-Wide Productivity
Metrics
Improving Productivity
Principles of Productivity Management
Substituting Capital for Labor
Staffing and Labor Scheduling Models
Basics of Labor Hour Management
Productivity and Performance
Scorecard
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
Chapter 10 Project Management
Defining Projects
Power, Influence, and Project
Management
Project Success
Key Phases of Project Management
Change Management
Rapid Prototyping
Risks Involved in Project Management
Departments of Performance
Improvement
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
PART III: Analytical Tools and
Technology
Chapter 11 Operational Metrics in
Healthcare
Organizations
Input Measures for Operating Metrics
Sources of Data for Operational
Metrics
Output Measures
Common Operating Metrics
Other Operational Metrics
Using Operational Metrics
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Reference
Chapter 12 Statistical Applications
in Operations
Management
Using Data for Operations Analysis
Review of Basic Statistical Concepts
Calculating Descriptive Statistics Using
Microsoft Excel
Linear Regression Analysis
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
Chapter 13 Using Information
Technology in Operations
Management
Background of Health IT in Health Care
Applying Data Analysis to an
Operations Management Question
Example of Using Microsoft Excel to
Link Data for Calculations
Impact of IT on Operational
Performance
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
Chapter 14 Operations Analysis
and Benchmarking
Operations Analysis
Benchmarking
An Introduction to Benchmarking
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
References
PART IV: Healthcare Supply Chain
Chapter 15 Supply Chain
Management
Defining Supply Chains
Process Flows in Supply Chain
Supply Chain Components
Business Processes in the Supply
Chain
Supply Chain Strategy for Hospitals
and Health Care
Patient (Customer) Demand Drives
Supply Chains
Principles of SCM
Strategy and Logistics Capabilities
Efficient Versus Responsive SCM
Strategy
Reverse Logistics
Supply Chain Information Systems
Supply Chain Collaboration
Sales and Operations Planning
Collaborative Planning, Forecasting,
and Replenishment
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
References
Chapter 16 Purchasing and
Materials Management
Purchasing
Items and Attributes
Data Hierarchies
United Nations Standards Products
and Services Code
Internal Controls
Spend or Value Analysis
Group Purchasing Organizations
Trends in Hospital Purchasing
Customer Service
Materials Management
Revenue Generation
The Costs of Supplies and Inventory
Differences Between Supply Expense
and Inventory
Optimizing Facility Layout and Design
Cost Minimization Models
Laundry and Linen
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
References
Chapter 17 Financial Management
of Inventory
Inventory and Its Role in Health Care
The Costs of Supplies and Inventory
Differences Between Supply Expense
and Inventory
Impact of Timing on Expenses
Important Facts About Inventory
Criteria for Inventory
Valuation Methods
Lower of Cost or Market
Periodic Versus Perpetual Systems
Accounting Entries for Supply and
Inventory
Inventory Errors
Inventory Ratios
Other Inventory Calculations
Limitations of Inventory Ratios
Inventory Policies and Procedures
Inventory Planning
Inventory Audit
Inventory Management Expectations
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Exercise Problems
References
Chapter 18 Operations
Management in the
Pharmacy
The Modern Pharmacy
The Pharmaceutical Supply Chain
Managing Items Using the National
Drug Code
Process Workflow and Automation in
the Pharmacy
Key Operations Management Trends
for Pharmacies
Effect on Pharmacy Performance
Chapter Summary
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Reference
Appendix: Answers to Selected Chapter
Exercise Problems
Glossary of Terms
Index
M
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Preface
y interest in health care began when I
was a child and found myself in and
out of hospital emergency departments for a
variety of mostly sports-related injuries. I
was fascinated knowing that the hospital
was always open and staffed with really
smart people trying to solve people’s
problems. I started my career in healthcare
management as an administrative fellow at
a large academic medical center, shadowing
executives and learning from rotations
through all departments. My career has
been diverse: I’ve been a hospital
administrator, served as the chief executive
officer for a health information exchange,
led a successful boutique consulting and
software company, and am now a professor
involved in research and education. It is this
diversity of experience that makes me fully
appreciate all of the interworkings of a
complex healthcare organization. My
approach is systems-oriented and highly
collaborative, both of which I feel are
necessary to effect large-scale change.
I hope this text will help students and
healthcare administrators address important
operational and day-to-day issues in this
rapidly evolving industry. We would like to
thank Jones and Bartlett Learning for their
leadership in publishing this third edition.
We would also like to thank the thousands of
readers and dozens of professors who read
the prior editions and offered their opinions
and insights for revisions. Finally, I dedicate
this text to my loving wife, Dr. Tiffany
Champagne-Langabeer, for her constant
love and support.
—Jim Langabeer
The business of health care has been my
passion since meeting a hospital
administrator (now CEO of a major
healthcare corporation) while a teenager in
the 1970s. Even then, there was some
recognition of the business element of our
industry and the need for efficient
operations in delivering patient care. As our
industry has evolved through
implementation of PPS, risk contracting,
VBP, and so many other initiatives aimed at
promoting efficiency and cost containment,
we have adapted so that we could preserve
operating margins—not always with better
operational performance. The incentives
created by those industry changes still leave
us as managers asking “how can we be
more efficient?” That became the
centerpiece of my work during more than 27
years as a hospital, health plan, and health
system chief financial officer—improving
operational performance to improve
financial results. The lessons learned from
those years of experience—and now years
of research in health operations with an
amazing colleague and mentor, Jim
Langabeer—now come to you in the third
edition of this work aimed at helping you
successfully pursue that objective of
operational excellence in your organization.
—Jeff Helton
Design Credits: © maxkabakov/Getty Images; ©
amgun/Getty Images; © monsitj/Getty Images.
About the Authors
James R Langabeer II, PhD, MBA, FACHE
Courtesy of James R Langabeer II, PhD, MBA
Dr. James Langabeer is a Professor of
Healthcare Management, Policy, and
Biomedical Informatics at the University of
Texas Health Science Center at Houston. He
has spent most of his career focused on
improving quality and efficiency of health
care, and has been involved in hospital
executive leadership, information
technology startups, management
consulting, and healthcare research and
teaching. Dr. Langabeer was the founding
Chief Executive Officer of a regional health
information exchange, where he led the
organization from concept to one of the
largest in the country. As Assistant
Controller at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center,
he oversaw the supply chain, strategic
projects, and financial management of one
of the largest hospitals in the country. James
also served as the Executive Vice President
of a premier mid-sized technology and
consulting firm based in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. He has lived and/or worked
extensively in Boston, London, Paris,
Rotterdam, Tel Aviv, and Houston. He has
served on the faculty of the University of
Texas System, Boston University, and Baylor
College of Medicine.
Dr. Langabeer has served as principal
investigator on many national research
projects. He has been funded by the
American Heart Association, the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control, Health and
Human Services, and many other agencies
and foundations. He has nearly 100
publications in some of the highest rated
management and clinical journals such as
the Health Care Management Review,
Pediatrics, and Health Care Management
Science.
Dr. Langabeer earned his PhD from the
University of Lancaster in England in
Management Science with an emphasis on
decision making, and an MBA from Baylor
University. He is a Fellow of the American
College of Healthcare Executives (FACHE).
Jeffrey Helton, PhD, CMA, CFE, FHFMA
Courtesy of Jeffrey Helton
Dr. Jeffrey Helton is an Associate Professor of
Health Care Management at Metropolitan
State University of Denver. He also holds
adjunct faculty appointments in healthcare
management at George Washington
University, Texas Tech, and at the University
of Colorado at Denver School of Business.
The majority of his career has been spent as
Chief Financial Officer for several healthcare
systems across the United States, where he
led several turnarounds of organizations
previously in bankruptcy or receivership.
During his career as a financial executive,
he identified a number of operational
challenges in hospitals and health plans that
required development of staffing standards,
labor management processes, and internal
financial controls to restore financial
stability to organizations. He has since
supported other healthcare organization
turnarounds as a consultant, assisting in the
analysis of labor costs and development of
labor control programs.
As a part of his consulting work, Dr. Helton
has also served as Chief Financial Officer of
the Disaster Housing Assistance Program on
behalf of families displaced from homes as a
result of Hurricanes Katrina and Ike. As
custodian for more than a quarter billion
dollars in federal funds, he became a
Certified Fraud Examiner and provided fraud
prevention assistance to agencies assisting
victims of these natural disasters. He has
also used that background in fraud
detection to assist several healthcare
organizations develop fraud prevention and
detection programs and has provided
material support to multiple healthcare
fraud prosecutions, resulting in millions of
dollars in recovered fraud losses.
Dr. Helton is a Fellow of the Healthcare
Financial Management Association, where
he serves on its Board of Examiners. He also
volunteers his financial management
expertise to the Association of University
Programs in Healthcare Administration
where he serves on its Board of Directors.
He is a Certified Fraud Examiner and is also
a member of the Board of Advisors for the
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners. Dr.
Helton is also a Certified Management
Accountant and a Fellow of the Healthcare
Financial Management Association.
Dr. Helton earned his PhD in Public Health
Management from the University of Texas
School of Public Health, a Master of Science
in Hospital and Health Administration from
the University of Alabama at Birmingham,
and a Bachelor of Business Administration
from Eastern Kentucky University. He is a
journal article reviewer for Healthcare
Financial Management, Journal of Healthcare
Management, Social Science and Medicine,
and Journal of Public Health Management
and Practice.
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New to the Third
Edition
Health care in the United States is
continuously struggling to innovate, reduce
costs, and improve quality. This balance has
not been achieved, partly because of health
policy that has not stimulated substantive
change to the industry’s structural
dynamics, but also because of gaps in the
management of healthcare organizations.
Improving the operations (production and
delivery of health services) can make
hospitals, clinics, and other organizations
more efficient and competitive and, most
importantly, higher quality. Improving
quality relative to costs through process
transformation is the focus of this text.
That’s why in this third edition, we focus on
providing more content on new areas, as
well as other improvements suggested by
readers and reviewers. We hope to provide
you with a better understanding of the
industry and outline methods and tools for
analyzing finances, streamlining clinical and
administrative processes, and optimizing
available resources—all of which are critical
to organizations that are struggling to
compete and survive in an era of
constrained reimbursements. In this edition,
we specifically provide expanded coverage
in these areas:
New chapter on managed care, health
plans, and value-based payments and
their impact on operations
New chapter on Lean and Six Sigma
quality improvement techniques
New chapter on information technology
in operations
New chapter on the use of statistical
analyses in operations management
Completely revised chapters on supply
chain management
Significant expansion and updated focus
on healthcare finance and financial
analysis
Extensive reorganization, updated
references, and even more extensive
glossary of key terms
We have also addressed some errors and
omissions in the first two editions. In all, we
have 18 chapters divided into 4 parts, which
will allow the academic reader to complete
about one chapter per week during the
semester.
In the first two editions, this text has served
as a reference guide for thousands of
practitioners and students alike who seek to
learn about healthcare operations and how
to improve organizational competitiveness
and performance. We’d like to thank our
faithful readers who have adopted this text
for their classrooms and provided us with
insight for this third edition.
PART I
An Overview to
Healthcare
Operations
CHAPTER 1 Operations
Management and
Decision-Making
CHAPTER 2 Hospitals and the
Healthcare Industry
CHAPTER 3 Operational Finance
CHAPTER 4 Health Plan Operations
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CHAPTER 1
Operations
Management and
Decision-Making
H
GOALS OF THIS CHAPTER
1. Describe a systems approach to
management.
2. Define healthcare operations
management.
3. Describe the roles and
responsibilities of healthcare
operation managers.
4. Examine the management decision-
making process.
5. Understand the goals of operations
management.
6. Describe the management discipline
and where operations management
fits.
ealthcare operations management is
a discipline that integrates scientific
principles of management to determine the
most efficient and optimal methods to
support patient care delivery. Given the
interrelatedness of processes across most
organizations, a systems approach, which
encourages optimizing the whole rather
than simply parts, is essential. Most
employment positions in healthcare
organizations today are, in fact, roles that
involve coordination and execution of day-
to-day operations. This chapter provides the
rationale for operations management and
describes its evolving role in helping both
hospitals and other clinical organizations
become more competitive.
▶ A Systems
Approach
This text is fundamentally about providing
practical information to guide management
of operations in a healthcare organization. In
order to do this, we have to start with a
foundation to understand the industry, the
organization, and then provide the
necessary toolkit to guide improvements
across organizations. Throughout this text
we focus on understanding the organization
as a system, improving processes and
productivity, analyzing and measuring
operational performance, using data and
systems to guide improvements, and
streamlining the healthcare supply chain.
FIGURE 1-1 presents the common themes
in this text.
FIGURE 1-1 Operations Management in
Health Care
An organization is a group of people who
work together, through interconnected
processes and behaviors, to achieve a
common purpose. Therefore, a healthcare
organization is a specific type of
organization engaged in either production or
delivery of health goods and services. Types
of healthcare organizations include primary
care clinics, urgent care centers, hospitals,
freestanding emergency departments, retail
pharmacies, physician offices, device and
equipment firms, and pharmaceutical
manufacturers, to name a few.
One of the key terms used in organization
involves the interconnection or
interrelationships between workflows and
people. This is aligned with the systems
perspective or systems thinking, which
entails a focus on the whole, rather than just
on the parts. Healthcare operations
management is about planning and
directing these interconnected processes or
systems. When we use the term system,
we refer to a set of connected parts that fit
together to achieve a purpose. Healthcare
operations and systems management is the
set of diverse and interrelated activities that
allow for diagnosis, treatment, payment,
and administrative management in
healthcare facilities.
▶ The Healthcare
Industry
Many healthcare organizations are nonprofit
in nature, which influences management
styles and thinking. For example, nearly
80\% of hospitals are considered not-for-
profit and exist solely to serve the
community in which they operate, although
this has decreased in recent years. As
nonprofits, these organizations are exempt
from most federal and state taxation and
are not expected to show continuous
positive growth rates or large profit margins,
as most publicly traded firms do. However, if
a hospital or healthcare organization cannot
show some return on the capital or dollars
invested, there will be negative
consequences. For example, failure to show
reasonable margins will likely cause the
public bond market (which finances most
healthcare growth today) to assign subpar
credit ratings; therefore, the bonds
themselves will have poor yields, making
hospitals less than stellar investments for
bondholders.
Most importantly, the term limited profit
margins implies there will be fewer dollars
to invest back in the business to ensure that
buildings are updated, that equipment is
replaced and technology is modern, and
that clinical programs will continue to
expand and be enhanced. Without these
investments, hospitals will probably be
unable to attract the most qualified
physicians and administrators, which will
continue the downward spiral. While some
hospitals and healthcare systems wait for
changes in the public health policy to save
them, the more competitive and successful
hospitals are acting now to protect their
margins.
In this era of continual pricing pressures
affecting the top line of the income
statement, and with a large majority of all
hospitals reporting negative profit margins,
it is essential that hospitals begin to look
toward more sophisticated business
strategies to succeed. Differentiated
marketing programs and strategies, broader
use of advertising, and more careful and
precise long-term planning about service
lines are all strategies that must be utilized
(Rovin, 2001).
There needs to be a broader adoption of
operations management techniques into
health organizations. Monitoring and
maximizing labor productivity for all medical
support and allied health professionals is
critical to maintaining salary expenses.
Incorporating queuing theory and
scheduling optimization methods helps drive
waste and cycle time out of facilities.
…
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