The Logics of Healthcare : The Professionals Guide to Health System Science

Title: The Logics of Healthcare : The Professionals Guide to Health System Science
Author: Paul Lillrank
ISBN: 1138626244 / 9781138626249
Format: Soft Cover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Productivity Press
Year: 2018
Availability: Out of Stock

Tab Article

Most of the current literature on healthcare operations management is focused on importing principles and methods from manufacturing. The evidence of success is scattered and nowhere near what has been achieved in other industries. This book develops the idea that the logic of production, and production systems in healthcare is significantly different. A line of thing that acknowledges the ingenious characteristics of health service production is developed.

This book builds on a managerial segmentation of healthcare based on fundamental demand-supply constellations. Demand can be classified with the variables urgency, severity, and randomness. Supply is constrained by medical technology (accuracy of diagnostics, efficacy of therapies), patient health behavior (co-creation of health), and resource availability. Out of this emerge seven demand-supply-based operational types (DSO): prevention, emergencies, one-visit, electives, cure, care, and projects. Each of these have distinct managerial characteristics, such as time-perspective, level of co-creation, value proposition, revenue structure, productivity and other key performance indicators (KPI).

The DSOs can be envisioned as platforms upon which clinical modules are attached. For example, any Emergency Department (ED) must be managed to deal with prioritization, time-windows, agitated patients, the necessity to save and stabilize, and variability in demand. Specific clinical assets and skill-sets are required for, say, massive trauma, strokes, cardiac events, or poisoning. While representing different specialties of clinical medicine they, when applied in the emergency – context, must conform to the demand-supply-based operating logic.

A basic assumption in this book is that the perceived complexity of healthcare arises from the conflicting demands of the DSO and the clinical realms. The seven DSOs can neatly be juxtaposed on the much-used Business Model Canvas (BMC), which postulates the business model elements as value proposition; customer segments, channels and relations; key activities, resources and partners; the cost structure; and the revenue model.

Tab Article

  • Goes beyond lean healthcare, not contradicting, but completing.
  • Fundamental reading for anybody interested in healthcare analytics, big data applications, etc.
  • Gives a coherent framework that can be expanded and elaborated.
  • Useful for innovators and investors in evaluating the potential of new technologies.

Tab Article

Preface

Chapter 1 : Introduction
Chapter 2 : Healthcare as a Service Industry
Chapter 3 : Methodology
Chapter 4 : Demand-Supply-Based Operating Platforms (DSO)
Chapter 5 : The Business Model Canvas (BMC)
Chapter 6 : The Dsos as Distinct Business Models
Chapter 7 : Dso Ion Practice
Chapter 8 : Summary, Conclusion and Discussion

Index