
When you think of a hospital, what comes to mind? Patients, emergency rooms, technology and medical advancements. Making the sick and injured well again. When officials at Virginia Mason think of hospitals, they think of cars. A car manufacturing plant, to be exact. Beginning in 2000 the hospital's leaders looked at their infrastructure and saw it was designed around them, not the patient, said Dr. Gary Kaplan, Virginia Mason's chairman and chief executive officer...They began looking for a better way to improve quality, safety and patient satisfaction. After two years of searching, they discovered the Toyota Production system, also known as lean manufacturing...Virginia Mason has tailored the Japanese model to fit health care..." 'People are not cars' is very common for me to hear," Kaplan said. "We get so wrapped up in the seriousness and specialness of health care, but we also have to open our eyes to other industries...Toyota is obsessed with the customer and customer satisfaction ... all those things Toyota was about was what we wanted"...He said not everyone has agreed with the new system and a few physicians have left Virginia Mason because of it. "To some it seems like obsessive-compulsive disorder run amok, but it's part of a solution that eliminates mistakes," Pittenger said...more...
The Washington Post carried this story three years ago. Also, the Wall Street Journal covered a similar plan at Allegheny General Hospital in 2004 which prompted this response:
"When you're sick, and miserable, and scared, which describes 99% of the patients in American hospitals, the last thing you want is some nurse trying to be efficient instead of sitting with you and calming you down. Take your inhumanity back to the factory, folks".