Application of BPR in Healthcare
Application of BPR in Healthcare
Application of BPR in Healthcare
By Ankush Gupta
Environmental pressure to cut cost and to increase productivity has given in a new face to
TQM in the form of continuous quality improvement and total productivity management
(TPM). In the implementation of TPM, Business Process Reengineering (BPR) plays a core
role. Globalisation has forced different types of production industries to resort to BPR for
reducing the operating cost and maintaining production cost to a level where it remains
competitive.
Exponential rise in the cost of delivery of healthcare services, price competition, market
realignment are the major factors that are forcing hospitals to scrutinize their business
processes and to redesign them in a manner that would not only help to keep the prices
competitive but also help in delivering quality care to the patients.
In early eighties, service environment design and service process design were more focused
on clinical effectiveness and technical efficiency. In late nineties, the focus included patient
customer service excellence along with clinical components. The methodology of healthcare
purchase is gradually shifting from cash and carry model to third party payments through
insurance companies and reimbursement schemes.
In India where per capita health expenditure is not very high and also healthcare budget is
decreasing, BPR can provide some solution in reducing wasteful processes in government
health setups. Private hospitals can also get benefit from BPR in containing cost and keeping
the cost within the reach of general masses.
The major factors that are forcing hospitals to utilise concepts of BPR are:
- Delivery of improved service quality to external customers
- Reducing bottlenecks by improving service quality to internal customers
- Improve financial performance by cost cutting
- Improve clinical performance
- Reduce processing time of service delivery
- Adopt the positive experiences of healthcare organisations abroad
- Pressure to comply with regulatory requirements
- To remain competitive with other healthcare organisations
A BPR project may have following steps:
3. Methodology definition
Team to undertake project and tools to be used for problem analysis and solution testing
are to be decided next. In case of problems relating to waiting time in OPD, the team
comprising of OPD executives, consultants and designated members from projects
department could be constituted. A variety of tools are available for business process
reengineering ranging from workflow diagrams to computerised simulation models. In case
of OPD, the team can actually draw work flow diagrams to identify wasteful process and to
find an alternative process sequence.
5. Development of solution
Once the problem is analysed and all key decisions are taken, the team can then start
working on solutions. In case of OPD waiting time, the new sequence of activities in the
process can be tested in simulated environment to have an approximate idea of new waiting
time.
6. Implementation
In case of OPD, the new process models need implementation of computers and developing
a computerised module for appointments and voucher generation. Implementation of
computerised modules will take overtime and the process can be shifted from manual to
computerised completely only when the system settles down. A BPR solution has to be
implemented in phases.
In a service industry like hospitals, good process management can provide with requisite
cutting edge which can become a competitive advantage over other service providers in the
market. Business process reengineering may not be necessarily cheap, it can be expensive
also in the initial phases. In case of computerization of front office i.e. admission and billing
in a hospital, the cost of installing computers and implementing a package can be very high
but at the same time computerization reduces processing time, saves manpower and also
helps in strategic control (which may not be possible in manual system) which can help save
money to the hospital.