The Pittsburgh way to efficient healthcare : improving patient care using Toyota-based methods
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Pittsburgh way to efficient healthcare : improving patient care using Toyota-based methods
Healthcare Performance Press, c2008
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Comprises stories written over the past six years for the monthly newsletters of the Pittsburgh Regional Health Initiative (PRHI)
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Winner of a 2013 Shingo Research and Professional Publication Award
America's healthcare system needs to change. Not only does our country spend 16 percent of its gross domestic product on healthcare, but despite spending more than other industrialized countries, our general health lags behind. While we have plenty of data identifying where healthcare in America falls short, we've precious little practical, hands-on information about how to fix it.
In The Pittsburgh Way to Efficient Healthcare, Naida Grunden provides a ingenious and optimistic look at how principles borrowed from industry can be applied to make healthcare safer, and in doing so, make it more effective and less costly. The book is a compilation of case studies from units in different hospitals around the Pittsburgh region that successfully applied industrial principles to the benefit of patients and the satisfaction of employees.
The Pittsburgh Way to Efficient Healthcare is written for all healthcare stakeholders - from clinicians to insurers to employers to those who have the greatest stake in healthcare quality improvement, the patients.
About the Author:
Naida Grunden has been a business and technical writer for over 25 years, specializing for the past six years in health and medical writing for the Pittsburgh Regional Health Initiative. She writes the PRHI Executive Summary newsletter, a publication she founded in 2001 (www.prhi.org). Her work has appeared in publications as varied as the Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety and Air Line Pilot magazine.
Ms. Grunden received the 2006 Challenge Award from the American College of Clinical Engineering for her article on the VA wheelchair work in Biomedical Instrumentation and Technology magazine. Ms. Grunden completed her B.A. in English at California State University, East Bay, and her secondary English teaching credential at California State University, San Francisco. She lives in Bellingham, Washington. Visit her website at www.NaidaGrunden.com.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1. Why it matters
Chapter 2. Eliminating infection
Chapter 3. Moving closer to the patient
Chapter 4. Making handoffs safer
Chapter 5. Reducing medication errors
Chapter 6. Eliminating the wait
Chapter 7. Applying best practices
Chapter 8. Transforming a medical specialty
Glossary
Index
About the Author
by "Nielsen BookData"