1. Dissemination of Lean methods to improve Pap testing quality and patient safety.
- Author
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Raab SS, Andrew-Jaja C, Grzybicki DM, Vrbin CM, Chesin CM, Fisch JM, Dabbs DJ, Sommer DL, and Blaser SM
- Subjects
- Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Total Quality Management, Vaginal Smears, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell diagnosis, Clinical Competence, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: To determine if the implementation of Lean methods resulted in improved Pap test quality and diagnostic accuracy in 5 clinician practices., Materials and Methods: We performed a 1-year case-control study that included 5,384 control (preintervention) and 5,442 case (postintervention) women who had a Pap test procured by 1 of 5 clinicians. Using Lean methods, the clinicians increased their focus of Pap test procurement by creating a "one-by-one" workflow and recorded process completion using a Lean checklist. We compared the case and control Pap test quality and accuracy measures using the proportion of Pap tests lacking a transformation zone component, proportion of unsatisfactory Pap tests, frequency of newly detected cervical intraepithelial neoplasia following a previous benign Pap test, and proportion of Pap tests with a diagnosis of atypical squamous cells of unknown significance., Results: After the intervention, there was a statistically significant decrease in the mean proportion of Pap tests lacking a transformation zone component, p =.011. Two of 5 clinicians showed a statistically significant decrease in their unsatisfactory Pap test frequency, although the overall Pap test unsatisfactory frequency for the case group was not statistically significant lower, p =.087. The case group showed a 114% increase in newly detected cervical intraepithelial neoplasia following a previous benign Pap test, p =.004. There was no statistically significant difference for the proportion of Pap tests with a diagnosis of atypical squamous cells of unknown significance, p =.908., Conclusions: Disseminating Lean methods across a group of clinicians resulted in improved Pap test quality and diagnostic accuracy.
- Published
- 2008
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