The a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.

The purpose of this study was to illustrate the application of A3 Problem Solving Reports of the Toyota Production System to our research vivarium through the methodology of Continuous Performance Improvement, a lean approach to healthcare management at Seattle Children's (Hospital, Research In...

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Main Authors: James A Bassuk, Ida M Washington
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812205?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-8b226760e526437e862ffd75dc68dc1e2020-11-25T01:59:34ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01810e7683310.1371/journal.pone.0076833The a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.James A BassukIda M WashingtonThe purpose of this study was to illustrate the application of A3 Problem Solving Reports of the Toyota Production System to our research vivarium through the methodology of Continuous Performance Improvement, a lean approach to healthcare management at Seattle Children's (Hospital, Research Institute, Foundation). The Report format is described within the perspective of a 10-step scientific method designed to realize measurable improvements of Issues identified by the Report's Author, Sponsor and Coach. The 10-step method (Issue, Background, Current Condition, Goal, Root Cause, Target Condition, Countermeasures, Implementation Plan, Test, and Follow-up) was shown to align with Shewhart's Plan-Do-Check-Act process improvement cycle in a manner that allowed for quantitative analysis of the Countermeasure's outcomes and of Testing results. During fiscal year 2012, 9 A3 Problem Solving Reports were completed in the vivarium under the teaching and coaching system implemented by the Research Institute. Two of the 9 reports are described herein. Report #1 addressed the issue of the vivarium's veterinarian not being able to provide input into sick animal cases during the work day, while report #7 tackled the lack of a standard in keeping track of weekend/holiday animal health inspections. In each Report, a measurable Goal that established the basis for improvement recognition was present. A Five Whys analysis identified the Root Cause for Report #1 as historical work patterns that existed before the veterinarian was hired on and that modern electronic communication tools had not been implemented. The same analysis identified the Root Cause for Report #7 as the vivarium had never standardized the process for weekend/holiday checks. Successful outcomes for both Reports were obtained and validated by robust audit plans. The collective data indicate that vivarium staff acquired a disciplined way of reporting on, as well as solving, problems in a manner consistent with high level A3 Thinking.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812205?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James A Bassuk
Ida M Washington
spellingShingle James A Bassuk
Ida M Washington
The a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.
PLoS ONE
author_facet James A Bassuk
Ida M Washington
author_sort James A Bassuk
title The a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.
title_short The a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.
title_full The a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.
title_fullStr The a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.
title_full_unstemmed The a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.
title_sort a3 problem solving report: a 10-step scientific method to execute performance improvements in an academic research vivarium.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description The purpose of this study was to illustrate the application of A3 Problem Solving Reports of the Toyota Production System to our research vivarium through the methodology of Continuous Performance Improvement, a lean approach to healthcare management at Seattle Children's (Hospital, Research Institute, Foundation). The Report format is described within the perspective of a 10-step scientific method designed to realize measurable improvements of Issues identified by the Report's Author, Sponsor and Coach. The 10-step method (Issue, Background, Current Condition, Goal, Root Cause, Target Condition, Countermeasures, Implementation Plan, Test, and Follow-up) was shown to align with Shewhart's Plan-Do-Check-Act process improvement cycle in a manner that allowed for quantitative analysis of the Countermeasure's outcomes and of Testing results. During fiscal year 2012, 9 A3 Problem Solving Reports were completed in the vivarium under the teaching and coaching system implemented by the Research Institute. Two of the 9 reports are described herein. Report #1 addressed the issue of the vivarium's veterinarian not being able to provide input into sick animal cases during the work day, while report #7 tackled the lack of a standard in keeping track of weekend/holiday animal health inspections. In each Report, a measurable Goal that established the basis for improvement recognition was present. A Five Whys analysis identified the Root Cause for Report #1 as historical work patterns that existed before the veterinarian was hired on and that modern electronic communication tools had not been implemented. The same analysis identified the Root Cause for Report #7 as the vivarium had never standardized the process for weekend/holiday checks. Successful outcomes for both Reports were obtained and validated by robust audit plans. The collective data indicate that vivarium staff acquired a disciplined way of reporting on, as well as solving, problems in a manner consistent with high level A3 Thinking.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812205?pdf=render
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