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MEDSTAR HEALTH. MedStar Health is a $2.9 billion non-profit healthcare organization and a community-based network of seven hospitals and other healthcare services in the Baltimore-Washington region. As the area's largest health system, it is one of its largest employers, with more than 24,000 employ
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1. VENDOR ACCESS PROGRAM PRESENTED BY
DONNA NORMAN
2. MEDSTAR HEALTH MedStar Health is a $2.9 billion non-profit healthcare organization and a community-based network of seven hospitals and other healthcare services in the Baltimore-Washington region. As the area's largest health system, it is one of its largest employers, with more than 24,000 employees and 4,600 affiliated physicians, all of whom support MedStar Health's patient-first philosophy that combines care, compassion and clinical excellence with an emphasis on customer service. We prove this everyday with over 145,000 inpatient admissions and more than one million outpatient visits each year.
3. SAFETY AND SECURITY MedStar is constantly in the process of identifying safety risks to patients and staff
Sales and service representatives have access to all areas of the hospital even restricted areas such as OR and Cath Lab
Little documentation on criminal history, health or certification.
Unapproved selling
4. FACTORS TO CONSIDER
Large system- easy to maintain
Hospitals and off site locations
Over 130 operating rooms
35 cardiac cath labs
350,000 emergency room visits
HIPPA compliance
Unauthorized selling of products
Unannounced visits to doctors offices and departments
5. STEPS TO IMPLEMENT PROGRAM Define the needs of the organization
Identify the method and resources needed to start a vendor program
Decision to insource or outsource the program
Notify vendors
Communication to MedStar
Assessment of program
6. RESEARCH Other systems have the same issues—do they have a solution?
Sentara shared their information
AORN (Association of perioperative nurses) Position statement
Review of internal policies and procedures
Resources
7. DECISIONS New system-wide policy to bring continuity to the program
Input for this policy was received from all business units
Who will collect the data, create badges, monitor access
Materials Management and Security departments will be tasked with this program
Set start date
8. PROCESSING Data collection
Difficulty in obtaining vendor names and contact information
Letters to vendors and Materials Management assistance
CD created with all requirements
Email and voicemail
Outsourced the data collection and processing of badges
9. SECURITY LEVELS Different levels of access needed
Patient care areas differ from Pharmacy
All representatives must have a photo ID badge
Daily badge will be provided to vendors who visit less than twice a year
All vendors are required to have an appointment and sign in and out
Any products brought into the hospital without Value Analysis approval will be considered gifts
10. BADGE REQUIREMENTS Criminal background check
Drug test
Confidentially statement
Education or certification on products
Appointment required
Immunization required for restricted areas
Business code of conduct
11. IMPLEMENTATION Letters and CD sent to vendors
Collection of documentation, notification of missing items and creation of badge was outsourced
Badges were distributed by Corporate Materials Management department
No fees for initial badge
Late fee if not completed by deadline
Replacement badge fee
12. IMPLEMENTATION Key component was to have hospital and system administration enforce the program
Vendor leadership involved in violations
Penalty for vendors that don’t comply
Vendor restricted for 30 days
Initially only 800 of estimated 2500 vendors were notified
CD’s are distributed only by request through email
13. LESSONS LEARNED Voicemail was not an acceptable method of communication
Due to the size of this project a full time manager was needed
Labor intensive badge distribution
Communication and participation by all is paramount to a successful program
14. Evaluating & Selecting Supply Chain Management Technology Applications
AHRMM HIMSS ANNUAL TECHNOLOGY SYMPOSIUM
February 25, 2007
New Orleans, LA
Presented by
Carl Natenstedt, Vice President Technology Solutions &
Jamie Kowalski, Managing Director, Business Development
Owens + Minor- Richmond, VA
15. Program Objectives Attendees will be able to:
Define Technology’s Role in Successful Supply Chain Management Strategies
Explore Two New Technology Areas and How They Contribute to Supply Chain Excellence
Explore Techniques for Selling the Technology Solution to Management
16. What is Being Managed? The Enterprise-Wide Supply Chain
17. Supply Chain Management Strategies Restructure
Reengineer Processes
Maximize Customer Satisfaction
Optimize Resource Productivity
Minimize Operations & Supply Expense
Be an Efficient Customer
Accountability with Those in Control
Use Metrics to Manage
Match Technology to Strategy
18. Technology Applications for Supply Chain Management Automation
Point of Use Dispensers
Bar Code Scanners
RFID
Automated Guided Vehicles (and other automated bulk transport)
Pneumatic Tube Systems (PTS)
Robots
Automated Storage Retrieval Systems/Carousels
19. Technology Applications (cont’d) Knowledge Management
Total Spend
Data/Catalog Management
MMIS; Requisition through Payables
E-Commerce, EDI
Asset Tracking & Management (inventory of equipment, consumables, implants)
Instrument Management
20. Information Technology Enables Optimization
21. Technology Enables Supply Chain Optimization OPERATIONS LEVEL
Automate, Standardize Processes
Replace Labor
Enhance Labor Productivity
Enhance Quality Consistency
Increase Processing Speed, Accuracy
Reduce Operating Expense
Capture Data, Convert to Information
22. Source: Supply Chain Summit- Canada Sept. 05 ECommerce Automates the Transactional Supply Chain
23. Supply Chain Management Strategies Distribution
Ordering, Receiving, Paying
Filling orders
Tracking inventory
Tracking arrivals, deliveries
Fill Rates
Point –of-use to Source
Freight expense
Cost per line filled, delivered
Accuracy
Productivity
Scheduling
24. Technology Enables Strategy STRATEGIC LEVEL
Provide Comprehensive and Consistent Visibility of all Supply Chain Components
Transform Information/Data into Knowledge
Leads to Strategy Development and Action
Optimize Performance
Position Technology as part of Strategy; not THE Strategy… a Tool, Enabler
25. Technology Tackles New Areas Spend Management / Contract Management
Clinical Inventory / Utilization Management
Performance Management
26. Spend Management Spend Visibility - How can this be stratified, analyzed?
Who?
What?
How much?
With whom?
Reduce Product Pricing
Utilization of corporate contracts, tiers
Assessment/reduction of value add costs
Utilization of bids, negotiation
Price standardization, compliance
Standardize products
Increase budgetary accountability at user level
Control utilization
Value Analysis: item selection, standardization
Supplier Standardization
27. Contract Management Contract Coverage - What percentage of spend dollars in a product category are covered by contracts?
Contract Compliance – What percentage of my “covered” spend is “on contract”?
Contract / Transaction Accuracy – Are we on the right tier? Did we get the contracted price 100% of the time?
29. Technology Enables the StrategyPerformance Management Capture and Display Metrics; Consistent, Accurate, Timely
Recognize Trends
Stratify in Variety of Ways
Avoid “One Indicator” Syndrome
Don’t Measure it, Can’t Manage it
Understand, Communicate, Educate, Motivate
Take action, reward
30. Example - Performance Dashboards
31. Clinical Inventory / Utilization Management Inventory Management
Define, Identify Inventory
What? Where? How Much?
Consignment vs Owned
Perpetual vs Periodic
Increase inventory turns
PAR levels or EOQ
Link with Distribution – Restock Frequency
Units of Measure Matching
SKU Allocation
Utilization Management
Activity Based Costs; Procedure Costs
Comparison between physicians
Connection with outcomes: LOS, readmits
32. Real Time Utilization Data
33. Key Benefits - Hospital Enables visibility
Lets departments run “leaner”
Saves time and increases productivity
Minimizes stock outs and product spoilage
Saves space
Improves charge capture
Can improve safety, patient care (QA)
Gives vendors insights to improve service
34. Key Benefits - Hospital Links contracting to utilization directly, real time
Extends supply chain portfolio visibility, control
Enables real time, constant data analysis
Utilization
Stocking
Vendor services, consignment tracking
Contracting
Opportunity to involve vendors in improving inventory practices, contracting terms, commitments, rebates
35. Technology ApplicationsEvaluation Process Assess Supply Chain Strategic Operations Plan Fit
Operations Reengineering, Optimization
Opportunities, Needs, Gaps
Assess Technology Applications
Redundancies
Impact; Operations, ROI
Build the Business Case
36. Business Case for Technology Investment Current State
Future State; What’s out there, needed
Goals, Objectives, Outcomes
Integration
Organization and Supply Chain Strategy Impact
Investments and ROI
37. ROI CALCULATION Current Process Costs, Outcomes
Modeled Process Costs, Outcomes
Cost of Investment, Operations
Financial Results
Operating Expense Reduction
Simple PayBack
Net Present Value
Return on Invested Capital
38. Selling the Technology Convince yourself first, commit and show passion, confidence
Start small, think big
Start with the Supply Chain Vision/Future State; How Technology Fits, Enables the Outcomes
Position Technology as part of Strategy; not THE Strategy… a Tool, Enabler
39. Selling the Technology Selecting With Whom to Start stakeholders, executive champion, CIO?
Educate; What’s in it for the Enterprise; for the Supply Chain
Tell the Story
How to Engage and Support Plan
40. Selling the Technology Link Technology to Operations and Outcomes, Results, Benefits
Be Conservative, yet Compelling
Demonstrate the ROI
Fund the investment with Savings Achieved
41. Technology Implementation The “Whole Elephant”?
Timing
Sequencing
Funding – “Savings are the Source”
Tracking Results
Following the Plan – Keeping Options Open
Communicate Results/Outcomes
42. Questions, DiscussionConclusion
43. Measuring Variability Within a DRG