Application of Lean Principles to Neurosurgical Procedures: The Case of Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery, a Literature Review and Pilot Series

dc.contributor.authorLiu, Jesse J.
dc.contributor.authorRaskin, Jeffrey S.
dc.contributor.authorHardaway, Fran
dc.contributor.authorHolste, Katherine
dc.contributor.authorBrown, Sarah
dc.contributor.authorRaslan, Ahmed M.
dc.contributor.departmentNeurological Surgery, School of Medicineen_US
dc.date.accessioned2019-06-13T19:32:23Z
dc.date.available2019-06-13T19:32:23Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractBACKGROUND Delivery of higher value healthcare is an ultimate government and public goal. Improving efficiency by standardization of surgical steps can improve patient outcomes, reduce costs, and lead to higher value healthcare. Lean principles and methodology have improved timeliness in perioperative medicine; however, process mapping of surgery itself has not been performed. OBJECTIVE To apply Plan/Do/Study/Act (PDSA) cycles methodology to lumbar posterior instrumented fusion (PIF) using lean principles to create a standard work flow, identify waste, remove intraoperative variability, and examine feasibility among pilot cases. METHODS Process maps for 5 PIF procedures were created by a PDSA cycle from 1 faculty neurosurgeon at 1 institution. Plan, modularize PIF into basic components; Do, map and time components; Study, analyze results; and Act, identify waste. Waste inventories, spaghetti diagrams, and chartings of time spent per step were created. Procedural steps were broadly defined in order to compare steps despite the variability in PIF and were analyzed with box and whisker plots to evaluate variability. RESULTS Temporal variabilities in duration of decompression vs closure and hardware vs closure were significantly different (P = .003). Variability in procedural step duration was smallest for closure and largest for exposure. Wastes including waiting and instrument defects accounted for 15% and 66% of all waste, respectively. CONCLUSION This pilot series demonstrates that lean principles can standardize surgical workflows and identify waste. Though time and labor intensive, lean principles and PDSA methodology can be applied to operative steps, not just the perioperative period.en_US
dc.eprint.versionAuthor's manuscripten_US
dc.identifier.citationLiu, J. J., Raskin, J. S., Hardaway, F., Holste, K., Brown, S., & Raslan, A. M. (2018). Application of Lean Principles to Neurosurgical Procedures: The Case of Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery, a Literature Review and Pilot Series. Operative Neurosurgery, 15(3), 332–340. https://doi.org/10.1093/ons/opx289en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1805/19608
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherOxforden_US
dc.relation.isversionof10.1093/ons/opx289en_US
dc.relation.journalOperative Neurosurgeryen_US
dc.rightsPublisher Policyen_US
dc.sourceAuthoren_US
dc.subjectplan, do, study, act cyclesen_US
dc.subjectlumbar posterior instrumented fusionen_US
dc.subjecthealthcareen_US
dc.titleApplication of Lean Principles to Neurosurgical Procedures: The Case of Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery, a Literature Review and Pilot Seriesen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
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