1. Six Sigma DMAIC Quality Study: Expanded Nurse Practitioner’s Role in Health Care During and Posthospitalization Within the United States
- Author
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Sameer Kumar and Gregory W. McKewan
- Subjects
Community and Home Care ,District nurse ,Surgical nursing ,Quality management ,Leadership and Management ,business.industry ,DMAIC ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Six Sigma ,Workload ,Nursing ,Health care ,Medicine ,Nurse education ,business - Abstract
Aim: The purpose of this study is to leverage application of Six Sigma DMAIC Cycle in examining the expanded role of nurses in the United States for delivering improved health care during and posthospitalization of patients. Method: This study makes use of the operations management service tools, such as service blueprints and poka-yokes (mistake-proofing), as well as the DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and Control) method of the Six Sigma (these concepts are explained in the article) to define the failures of the process, reduce variability, improve the care process, and propose solutions. Fifty-three nurses from hospitals and small medical clinics responded to survey for this study. Results: This study reveals that nurses feel that increasing the number of nurses in hospitals would improve the care of patients. Nurses feel they could take on certain tasks currently only performed by doctors after receiving proper training. This would reduce the workload of doctors. Conclusions: Analysis of the current open-ended health care process allowed determining failure points and how to prevent such failures. Recommended poka-yokes include greater involvement of nurses in education and counseling patients during hospitalization and posthospitalization. Structured home visits and nurses role in improving communication with patients to foster better understanding and self-care compliance would decrease the number of unplanned readmissions. Expanding the current education process in nursing schools and nursing roles is crucial to implement a closed-loop health care delivery system, which incorporates suggested poka-yokes.
- Published
- 2011
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