Sustainability: orthopaedic surgery wait time management strategies

Author:

Amar Claudia,Pomey Marie-Pascale,SanMartin Claudia,De Coster Carolyn,Noseworthy Tom

Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine Canadian organizational and systemic factors that made it possible to keep wait times within federally established limits for at least 18 months. Design/methodology/approach – The research design is a multiple cases study. The paper selected three cases: Case 1 – staff were able to maintain compliance with requirements for more than 18 months; Case 2 – staff were able to meet requirements for 18 months, but unable to sustain this level; Case 3 – staff were never able to meet the requirements. For each case the authors interviewed persons involved in the strategies and collected documents. The paper analysed systemic and organizational-level factors; including governance and leadership, culture, resources, methods and tools. Findings – Findings indicate that the hospital that was able to maintain compliance with the wait time requirements had specific characteristics: an exclusive mandate to do only hip and knee replacement surgery; motivated staff who were not distracted by other concerns; and a strong team spirit. Originality/value – The authors’ research highlights an important gradient between three cases regarding the factors that sustain waiting times. The paper show that the hospital factory model seems attractive in a super-specialized surgery context. However, patients are selected for simple surgeries, without complications, and so this cannot be considered a unique model.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Health Policy,General Business, Management and Accounting

Reference23 articles.

1. Appleby, J. , Boyle, S. , Devlin, N. , Harley, M. , Harrison, A. , Locock, L. and Thorlby, R. (2005), “Sustaining reductions in waiting times: identifying successful strategies”, available at: www.kingsfund.org.uk/publications/sustaining-reductions-waiting-times (accessed 11 February 2012).

2. Canada Department of Finance. (2011), “Federal investments in support of the 10-year plan to strengthen health care”, available at: www.fin.gc.ca/fedprov/fihc-ifass-eng.asp (accessed 26 February 2012).

3. Cromwell, D.P. and Mays, L. (1999), “Can a PC-based model assist the management of waiting lists? Observations from a case study”, Journal of Quality in Clinical Practice , Vol. 19 No. 3, pp. 173-178.

4. Doppelt, B. (2003), “Overcoming the seven sustainability blunders”, The Systems Thinker , Vol. 14 No. 5, pp. 1-7.

5. Glynn, P.A. (2006), “Sustaining change: the imperative for patient access strategies”, Healthcare Papers , Vol. 7 No. 1, pp. 55-57.

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