24th April 2020
By Marco Aurelio, Improvement Advisor
2021 Update: The team went on to update their flowchart as they iterated on the design of their process for ordering and delivering Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). This soon developed into designing a warehouse process that now employs staff with supply chain skills and specialist software to manage the process of ordering and delivering PPE across the organisation.
True or false? Using quality improvement methodology is slow, cumbersome and not relevant when dealing with a crisis?
Colleagues from the Procurement team, Infection Control, Community Health Newham, Communications and the Quality Improvement department at East London NHS Foundation Trust (ELFT) worked collaboratively to use improvement tools and methods to test, iterate and standardise the existing manual process for ordering PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) into a faster digital process within a single day. Running a first test with a clinical team within 3 hours of starting this piece of work, we tested at scale four hours later and then implemented the process across the organisation the following day.
The Challenge
The process for ordering PPE relied partly on teams sending in their requests for PPE by email and those orders being fulfilled by a team of staff and volunteers that were put together to keep teams supplied. This sometimes involved back and forth conversations to get missing information about quantities needed, type of PPE, delivery locations, stock reconciliation and so forth.
What we did?
The team began by working together using a process map/flow chart to understand the current process for staff ordering PPE and some of the challenges that presented. From this, the team decided that a standardised online form would be helpful to both simplify user ordering and help with tracking orders and stock.
This provided a great opportunity to apply some of the principles of improvement to test and iterate quickly using a PDSA (Plan, Do, Study, Act) cycle. PDSA cycles make it possible to learn quickly and make changes based on that learning. Below is an extract of a PDSA form to describe how this group developed a new standardised process for ordering PPE.
Plan: Plan the test, including the plan for collecting data
Do: Run the test on a small scale
What happened?
Study: Analyse the results and compare to the predictions
Act: Can we adapt, abandon, adopt
Key learning
If you are keen to learn more about using PDSA to test on a small scale you can use the resources here>>.
Have you used any quality improvement tools or approaches as part of new way of working in response to COVID? Let us know by sharing your story here>>
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