News

SA Health looks at Lean

18 Oct
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ACIG consultants Gerard Colla and Matthew Bowler today delivered a seminar to SA Health about how best to apply the principles of Lean Thinking to the health sector.

ACIG has successfully applied Lean Thinking to a number of health services: a case study example is provided below.

Case Study

The Peter James Centre and Wantirna Health (PJC & WH) provides a broad range of sub-acute services to clients within the Eastern Health catchment of some 800,000 people. These services focus on aged care, rehabilitation and palliative care.

Following a series of staff workshops, a project team was established to focus on improving the efficiency and patient outcomes of its core care process. The core care process was divided into four stages: access, assessment, care planning and evaluation, and discharge.

The approach

The deliberate improvement methods of Lean Thinking were chosen as the foundation of the approach.

They were seen to be congruent with approaches being developed and deployed at other leading hospitals, the Victorian Department of Human Services, and by successful organisations in other industries.

ACIG was engaged to bring the method and experience of deliberate improvement to the project, particularly the concepts and tools of Lean Thinking.

The hospital working parties and facilitators were introduced to ACIG’s DIAGNOSE project method, and then coached throughout the period of the project.

The method and associated support included:

  • A one day action learning exercise where the trainee facilitators and facility staff were introduced to the principles of Lean Thinking and the tools of improvement in a case study based exercise.
  • Coaching to develop the capability of the facilitators throughout the course of the working parties. This coaching included the principles and tools of Lean Thinking, as well as team facilitation.

The deliverables required by PJC & WH included capacity building throughout the organisation to provide staff with the skills to facilitate ongoing deliberate improvement activities.

The Findings

Four working parties were facilitated through a process that included mapping the activity stream for their stage of the patient journey. Team based mapping always has an impact as those involved see the frustration of daily work appear as a braided stream of activity and visible confusion; these working parties were no different. Each of the four working parties identified many opportunities for improvement.

Findings included:

  • Referral forms typically contained missing or incorrect information for many fields. For example – 53% for entries in medication fields for external hospital referrals. This generated a large aggregate amount of wasted professional staff time.
  • Up to seven disciplines interviewed patients on day one. Patients were often overwhelmed by the process.
  • No single clear description of patient goals or a care plan eventuated from the assessment. This meant an absence of a reference point for later decisions.
  • Team care conferences were found to be very inefficient: 32% of patients did not have a care planning discussion documented in their medical record.
  • Discharge was often delayed due to delays accessing handyman services to modify patients’ homes.

These findings are not unique to Peter James Centre – they are typical of many health services.  However, the process by which they were discovered, by a working party of clinical and service professionals using the tools of deliberate improvement, ensured there was a strong commitment to change.

The results

Results have been dramatic and include:

  • 47 admission assessment form options have been reduced to 7 – an 85% improvement. Similarly the number of different data fields has reduced from about 215 in those 47 forms to about 75 aligned across the 7 forms – a 65% improvement.
  • Over 50% of patients now have documented evidence of functionally based goals – previous audits indicated that no patient file had such documented evidence. In addition there is now clear documentation of team meeting outputs in line with functional domains.
  • Every patient now has a designated Key Contact Person to reduce the frustration, confusion and misunderstandings for patients, their families and staff that previously occurred as the result of mixed communication channels.

Perhaps the most exciting outcome had been the increased capability of staff in the use of the tools and methods of Lean Thinking. They have since gone on to tackle other problem areas in their drive for improvement.

Critical success factor

A critical factor in the success of this phase of change at Peter James Centre has been the leadership of the General Manager, Ms. Janet Compton. ACIG has observed over many years of contribution to change and deliberate improvement projects that success and sustainability are ultimately dependent on the quality of leadership. This leadership was evident by the commitment of resources, public support and recognition for the teams, a clear expectation of the outcome, flexibility with the specific recommendations to edify the involved staff, and providing facilitators the time to learn and apply the Lean Thinking methods.

Reviewing the Regulatory Units Within the Department of Health

29 Sep
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ACIG has been engaged to provide practical advice on ways in which the Department of Health’s Environment Health Unit could administer its regulatory responsibilities more efficiently and better protect and improve the health of Victorians.

Within the Victorian Department of Health, the Environmental Health Unit aims to improve and protect the health and safety of Victorians by reducing the exposure of Victorians to the following hazards:

  • The harmful effects of radiation
  • Legionella disease from bacteria in cooling towers in buildings and warm water systems
  • Contaminated drinking water supply (and safe fluoridation)
  • Unsafe use of pesticides used by pest control operators to control insects and pest animals
  • Poor sanitation
  • Exposure to other potentially hazardous substances and public nuisances

ACIG’s consultants will analyse and evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of the Environmental Health Unit’s current regulatory compliance and enforcement activities.  We will also review recent best practice developments in regulatory compliance and enforcement activities.  We will then advise on practical ways to improve the compliance of regulated entities and better protect the health of Victorians from the environmental health hazards and risks that are the responsibility of the Unit to manage.

Our work will deliver an analysis of the effectiveness and efficiency of the Environmental Health Unit’s enforcement activities in obtaining high levels of compliance with environmental health legislation.  This will include:

  • A review of the Environmental Health Unit’s regulatory processes, policies, procedures and information management systems.
  • An evaluation including, where possible, measurement of the recent performance of the Unit in achieving its regulatory objectives.
  • Consultation with Unit staff, regulated entities and related regulatory functions.
  • Examination of recent reviews of regulatory enforcement and compliance activities, such as the recent review of the Environment Protection Authority.

ACIG has a sound track record of working with regulatory bodies to review their effectiveness and efficiency.  Similar recent assignments include our work for:

ACIG goes offshore. Again. And this time it made front page news…

07 Sep
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ACIG has a long track record of offshore assignments.  But our latest offshore venture has made us the envy of many: we’ve been to Norfolk Island.

Norfolk Island has an Australian postcode (2899), Australian currency, Australian police and other Australian connections yet boasts its own nine-member government, its own customs and immigration laws, own stamps and phone cards and even its own Commonwealth and South Pacific Games teams!

And somehow the ACIG team managed to be front page news in Norfolk Island.  And as for Peter Johnstone OAM?  Well, we think we’re lucky to have him too….

ACIG has been asked by the Australian Government Department of Regional Australia, Regional Development and Local Government to undertake a comprehensive review into the capacities and capabilities of the Norfolk Island Public Service.

Our review will recommend actions that the Norfolk Island Government and the Australian Government can take, if required, over the short, medium and long term to:

  • More efficiently and effectively provide an appropriate and sustainable range of government services to the highest ethical standards;
  • Improve the capacity and the skills of Norfolk Island Adminstration to deliver government services;
  • Deliver government services to a similar standard as those provided by a local or state level government in mainland Australia;
  • Improve resilience, change management and innovation across the public sector; and
  • Improve performance and accountability mechanisms.

ACIG Director Euan Lockie is speaking at the Australian Evaluation Society conference next week

17 Aug
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The Australasian Evaluation Society (AES) is the primary Australasian professional organisation for people involved in evaluation including evaluation practitioners, managers, teachers and students of evaluation, and other interested individuals. It has almost 1000 members involved in all aspects of evaluation and performance measurement.

We are very pleased to announce that Euan Lockie, ACIG Director and leader of our Evaluation Practice, is speaking at the AES Annual Conference next week.

Starting with workshops on 29 – 30 August, the AES Annual Conference 2011 will be held 31 August – 2 September 2011.  This year’s venue is the Sydney Hilton, 488 George Street,
Sydney NSW 2000

Evaluation claims to influence public policy, professional practice and the management of organisations.  What is the nature and extent of this influence? How can evaluations be made more influential?  And conversely, in a rapidly changing world, what are the main influences on evaluation? To what extent is evaluation responding by taking on new approaches and technologies?

The conference will focus on three sub-themes:

  • The influence of evaluation on society
  • Making an evaluation more influential
  • Influences shaping evaluation

Euan’s presentation is called ‘Better Business Regulation – A Self-Evaluation Framework and Process to Improve the Quality of Regulatory Practices’ and draws on his experience of working closely with regulators within the portfolio of the Victorian Department of Justice.

Euan will make his presentation at 8:30am on Thursday 1 September, in Ballroom B Level 3.

The AES Conference website is available here.

More information about Euan’s work with the regulators within the Victorian Department of Justice is available here.

A copy of Euan’s paper and presentation will be available in ACIG’s online library after the conference.

Australian Music Radio Airplay Project Evaluation

27 Jul
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DBCDE* has engaged ACIG to evaluate the Australian Music Radio Airplay Project (AMRAP).

The AMRAP is a community radio initiative that works with musicians and community broadcasters to increase radio airplay for contemporary Australian music through the community radio sector. AMRAP also produces and distributes radio content which promotes Australian music as well as developing an online resource for community broadcasters, musicians, industry bodies and audiences to learn about emerging artists.

AMRAP distributes contemporary Australian music on a genre-specific basis to community radio broadcasting stations, and records local musicians for rebroadcast across the sector. The beneficiaries of the program are the musicians, community radio stations and community broadcasting listeners.

*DBCDE is the Australian Government Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy.

Win, Win, Win. Three new clients for ACIG.

11 Jul
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In the last few weeks ACIG has added several more new clients to our list.

The Australian Government Department of Regional Australia, Regional Development and Local Government has asked us to undertake a review into the capacities and capabilities of the Norfolk Island Public Service.  And yes, our lucky consultants get to visit that beautiful island.  More details about the assignment can be found here.

Melbourne Water has asked ACIG to provide consulting services in the design of an enterprise-wide quality management system.  More details about the assignment can be found here.

And for the Office of the Emergency Services Commissioner, Victoria we are developing an evaluation framework and plan for their project Climate Change and the Emergency Management Sector: Building Research Capacity.


Local Councils – are we members of your panel of consultants?

20 Jun
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Probably!

Did you know that if you work for one of the local government organisations listed below, you can engage ACIG without going through a formal tendering process?

Panel membership means that ACIG has already been through a selection process and has an existing contractual arrangement with Council.  Staff can therefore seek formal Requests for Quotations (RFQs) from ACIG without going to open tender.

Your council not listed?  Give us a call anyway – we’re happy to discuss particular projects or general approaches to review, improvement and innovation.

Free Money! Access the government grants and assistance available to your business…

06 Jun
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The number of government grant and support programs available to business is enough to make your head spin.

Financial support, advice, or education and training programs – all are available to eligible businesses.   And you’ll never know if your business is eligible until you try…

We’ve found the best place to start looking is www.grantslink.gov.au.  GrantsLINK is an Australian Government directory with information about federal, state and local government funding programs.

Also, keep an eye on newspapers for grants advertisements.  Local government grants are often advertised locally.  Similarly, this weekend an Australian government program offering grants from $250,000 to the Textile, Clothing and Footwear industries  (on a dollar-for-dollar matching funding basis) was advertised in the weekend papers.  Click here for details.

ACIG has helped clients to source government funding worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.  For instance a number of companies within the Jeld-WEN group have engaged ACIG to deliver Certificate III and Certificate IV training to their manufacturing teams.  Jeld-WEN received direct government subsidies for this training.  The company has also realised genuine and substantial productivity gains as a direct result of their staff members’ new skills.

One of our consultants, Michelle Scott Tucker, is a former federal public servant.  She was the state manager for a national grants program and was responsible for giving away some $52 million dollars.  “I’ve never been quite so popular!” laughs Michelle, who now knows just what government is looking for in a funding application.  Our specialist Arts Consultant Samantha Comte also has a wealth of successful grant-writing expertise, as do many of our other consultants.

And ACIG can help you, too.  Just give us a call on 03 9650 7222 and we can talk about how to optimise your chances of gaining government funding.

Our Office Manager is leaving and we wish her well.

19 May
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Sharon Waddell, our fabulous Office Manager, is leaving for new horizons.

For four years she’s been the crucial hub of our business, ensuring everything runs smoothly for our clients and our consultants.

Sharon is organised, professional, stylish, and graceful under pressure. She tells a good joke and is always ready to lend a helping hand. So we don’t understand how she can possibly be such a rabid Collingwood supporter – but there you have it.

Everyone in the team here at ACIG would like to thank Sharon for all her hard work.

We wish Sharon and her family all the very best.

So far this year we’ve gained lots of new clients. Find out who….

10 May
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This year has begun with a bang.  We’ve gained lots of new clients, and had repeat work from some existing or past clients.  For details of our very latest projects, follow the links.

Australian Land and Coast (Australian Government)

Department of Primary Industries (Vic)

Department of Sustainability and Environment (Vic)

Department of Health (NT)

Frankston City Council

Surf Coast Shire Council

Western Alliance for Greenhouse Action