7 Tips for Tracking Savings From Team Projects
Wondering if your improvements have any dollar signs attached to them? Learn some tips for jump-starting your team's thinking about the financial benefits of performance improvement.
Wondering if your improvements have any dollar signs attached to them? Learn some tips for jump-starting your team's thinking about the financial benefits of performance improvement.
Oncology unit-based team pays attention when it uses which tubing--and saves $25,000 a year.
It started with a question from Oncology RN Tom Fought, a member of the Oregon Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals (OFNHP), at the Interstate Medical Office in the Northwest.
Why, he wondered, was primary tubing used for low-reaction drugs instead of the less-expensive short or secondary tubing?
That prompted the department’s unit-based team to start an improvement project that wound up saving $25,000 a year.
When patients come in for chemotherapy or other infusion medications, the drugs are administered via an IV: The bag holding the medication is hung on a pole, with a line that goes into the patient’s vein. When primary tubing is used, the valve to stop the flow of medication is very close to the patient’s body.
If the drugs being used have a high potential for an adverse reaction, it’s essential to use primary tubing, so that if there is an emergency and the line has to be shut, only a very little additional medication reaches the patient.
When the short tubing or secondary tubing is used, the valve to stop the flow of medication is farther from the patient. In this situation, if the valve is closed, more medication is in the line and will flow into the patient until the tube is empty. These types of tubing are appropriate when the medication has a low potential for a negative reaction.
Primary tubing is $4.10 per unit, short tubing is $3.65 and secondary tubing is 65 cents. The costs add up if primary tubing is used when it’s not necessary.
“I had no idea that we would be saving the unit that much money by conforming the tubing,” Fought says.
This team alone was able to save $25,000 a year. If every Kaiser Permanente oncology infusion department adopted this practice, the savings would be dramatic.
“This was such an easy tweak—we just needed to think outside of the box,” says Lacey Anderson, RN, the Infusion Team Lead and a member of OFNHP, who was involved in the project. “The team realized this was such a great idea and wondered, ‘Why haven’t we been doing this all along?’”
Heidi Rolf, the department manager and the UBT’s management co-lead, is proud of the work the team has accomplished. She attributes the success to the leadership of the team and notes that since the team has advanced to a Level 4 on the Path to Performance, team members have more camaraderie and are more engaged.
“At first it was a little difficult to change the habits of the nursing staff,” Fought says. “Within a few weeks, we had everyone on board and our tubing project took off.”
Staff members at the Primary Care department at the Bonita Medical Office in San Diego, Calif., found that when they streamlined supply orders, they saved far more than they had expected. Watch their story and become inspired.
Unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente are looking for innovative ways to improve their work and save money, too. Staff members at the Primary Care department at the Bonita Medical Office in San Diego, Calif., found that when they streamlined supply orders, they saved far more than they had expected. And while there were some minor hiccups, it wasn’t as hard as they expected, either. Watch their story and become inspired.
When a Patient Mobility team at the Richmond Medical Center in Northern California consistently got patients out of bed and walking, not only did patients heal faster, their average length of stay dropped by a full day. That avoided huge costs for the small community hospital.
Sometimes better care is also the most cost-effective care. That’s what the Patient Mobility team at the Richmond Medical Center in Northern California found out. When team members consistently got patients out of bed and walking, not only did patients heal faster, their average length of stay dropped by a full day. That avoided huge costs for the small community hospital. Watch this story about the team.
Quick tips, in six slides, for better PowerPoint presentations.
Step-by-step instructions on using the 6S process to eliminate clutter and unnecessary supplies and organize your workplace.
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Materials management and supply teams
Best used:
One-page tipsheet with 10 safety principles for materials management and supply teams. Use to share successful workplace safety practices with similar teams.
Workplace safety tips from an award-winning materials and supply team.
Tips on how unit-based teams can look for ways to cut costs, save money and improve affordability.
A list of some of the projects undertaken by UBTs to address affordability.
Fremont's Operating Room team co-leads talk about the benefits of business literacy training and how it helped the team reduce supply waste and save a projected $34,000 a year.