2018
DOI: 10.1108/ijlss-06-2017-0062
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Major barriers in Lean health care: an exploratory study in Uruguay

Abstract: Purpose This paper aims to outline the barriers in introducing Lean in health care and to asses which of these have a greater impact in the Uruguayan health-care sector. Design/methodology/approach To uncover the barriers hindering Lean health-care implementation, a literature review was undertaken. Once identified, first-hand information was obtained from managers and professionals involved in managerial activities who evaluated each of the difficulties using a Likert scale. Findings In total, 17 barriers… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Escuder et al [21] Outline 17 barriers in implementing lean in health care, which are; terminology (B0); lack of resources (B1); leader to guide the process (B2); lack of training (B3); lacking key performance indicators (KPI) (B4), commitment and support from top managers (B5), resistance to change (B6), lack of an improvement culture (B7); the existence of conflicting requirements (B8); the existence of functional silos (B9); hierarchical structure (B10); lack of motivation (B11); poor communication (B12); health-care regulations (B13); union conflicts (B14); lack of time devoted to the improvement program (B15); poor managerial skills (B16).…”
Section: Empirical Study Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Escuder et al [21] Outline 17 barriers in implementing lean in health care, which are; terminology (B0); lack of resources (B1); leader to guide the process (B2); lack of training (B3); lacking key performance indicators (KPI) (B4), commitment and support from top managers (B5), resistance to change (B6), lack of an improvement culture (B7); the existence of conflicting requirements (B8); the existence of functional silos (B9); hierarchical structure (B10); lack of motivation (B11); poor communication (B12); health-care regulations (B13); union conflicts (B14); lack of time devoted to the improvement program (B15); poor managerial skills (B16).…”
Section: Empirical Study Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regarding the lack of "commitment of senior management" (B 2 ), the leadership support is commonly mentioned as fundamental to sustain the lean transformation (Adamides et al, 2008;Jadhav et al, 2014;Adebanjo et al, 2016;Abu et al, 2019). This barrier is one of the most commonly mentioned factors and it has been categorized as a major inhibitor (Escuder et al, 2018). The commitment refers to aspects such as consistent financial support, team Sources: Frequency of citation of LSCM practices motivation, active involvement and supervision of the implementation of the lean practices (Vlachos, 2015;Dora et al, 2016;Abu et al, 2019).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, supportive organisational strategies and alignments are essential to implement successful lean initiatives, as they help to build confidence, ease cultural changes and become aligned with the new improvement system (Bhasin, 2013bAchanga et al, 2006Rise and Haddud, 2016;Escuder et al, 2018). This leads us to our second proposition towards organisational conduct and strategy:…”
Section: Woodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All the studies mentioned have contributed significantly, bringing new knowledge to academics and practitioners. However, after decades, the outcome of these research studies is merely a reporting of large lists of lean barriers (Poksinska, 2010;De Souza and Pidd, 2011;Hilton and Sohal, 2012;Aij et al, 2013a;Mostafa et al, 2013;Escuder et al, 2018). These lists present some degree of saturation with similar barriers, many of which have considerable overlaps, and barely represent new barriers.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%