The University of St. Thomas

Posts Tagged ‘operations management’

Capital Investment Decisions in Health Care – Five Questions for Prof. Southard

Published on: Thursday, May 24th, 2012

Peter Southard

We recently talked with Peter Southard, Ph.D., an assistant professor of operations and supply chain management, about his research on capital investment decisions in health care.

Q: Why did you decide to examine capital investment decisions in health care?

A: Increasing competition and artificially-imposed price controls in health care are forcing caregivers to rethink how they manage their delivery systems. Health care delivery systems must be able to provide extremely high-quality care at reasonable costs. Any variation in the systems and the processes needed to deliver the health care “product” serves to increase the costs and reduce the quality of that health care. The variation does so, partly, by increasing the time needed to deliver the service. One of the primary goals of health care must be, then, to identify and reduce the root causes of variation in its processes and systems.

This need is also true in all decision making processes in which variation, or lack of a consistent framework by which to make decisions, can lead to not only inefficiencies but also costly errors that reduce the hospital’s competiveness and its ability to deliver cost-effective care. One of the decisions impacting a health care system’s cost is the make/buy decision: when to outsource a process and when to maintain the process in-house. If the decision is to “make,” then the next decision is a capital investment one. Our research looks at adapting a framework from another area of business to this decision situation. We apply a Six Sigma quality tool, the Technology Function Deployment (TFD), to develop a practical framework that hospital managers can use to make consistent and effective decisions regarding capital investments versus outsourcing.

Q: Why is this topic of interest to you?

A: Professor Sameer Kumar and I have been doing quite a bit of research in this area of process improvement in health care. While researching our last paper, we noted the lack of uniformity in the laboratory equipment purchasing decisions of our subject hospital and decided to try and apply this approach to standardizing that process.  (more…)

The Frontier of Health Informatics

Published on: Thursday, May 5th, 2011

healthcare-itLast week I traveled to Moorhead, MN, to attend Sharp 2.0, a unique symposium that focused on the intersection of operations management and health informatics. The symposium was a collaboration of Minnesota State University Moorhead, Oklahoma State University and the Mayo Clinic.

The symposium highlighted many exciting new technological advances in health care, including new methods of pharmacy inventory management, the continuing challenges of physician use of electronic medical records, and examples of how country-wide electronic health records can be used. 

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