“…Authors investigating this issue argue that failures are due to the inability of organizations to deal with critical failure factors and to define effective paradigm introduction and diffusion strategies based on internal and external contextual factors (Coles et al, 2017). While contextual factors refer either to the structural, managerial and cultural characteristics of organizations or exogenous environmental factors in the state before the Lean introduction, critical failure factors refer to organizational barriers during the Lean dissemination phase (Coles et al, 2017;McDermott et al, 2022a). The failure factors related to the internal Lean context and those factors most critical to consider are not managing benchmarking activities (van Rossum et al, 2016), thinking in "silos" in administrative and clinical areas (de Souza and Pidd, 2011), the lack of confidence in applying Lean methodology (McDermott et al, 2022a), the absence or Lean deployment in the healthcare system ineffectiveness of communication systems (Al-Balushi et al, 2014;de Souza and Pidd, 2011), the inability to manage cross-functional teams (Bhat et al, 2019;McDermott et al, 2022a), and, most importantly, the lack of a project management approach and skillset (Henrique et al, 2021).…”