2018
DOI: 10.1186/s13643-018-0800-z
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The sustainability of Lean in pediatric healthcare: a realist review

Abstract: BackgroundLean is a quality improvement management system from the Toyota manufacturing industry. Since the early 2000’s, Lean has been used as an intervention for healthcare improvement. Lean is intended to reduce costs and improve customer value through continuous improvement. Despite its extensive use, the contextual factors and mechanisms that influence the sustainability of Lean in healthcare have not been well studied. Realist synthesis is one approach to “unpack” the causal explanations of how and why L… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(90 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
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“…Similar to our realist review findings [22], the degree to which mechanisms occurred was influenced by external pressures to use Lean [57], the complexity of care processes [7], the fit between Lean and local context [7, 57]; and other competing needs or demands [58], such as the constant change in healthcare environments. Early stages of implementation led by the consultancy company failed to customize Lean to local contexts, this triggered some pitfalls to the normalization of Lean in practice (e.g., feelings of disconnect, negative perceptions, resistance to Lean and a lack of support for Lean).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Similar to our realist review findings [22], the degree to which mechanisms occurred was influenced by external pressures to use Lean [57], the complexity of care processes [7], the fit between Lean and local context [7, 57]; and other competing needs or demands [58], such as the constant change in healthcare environments. Early stages of implementation led by the consultancy company failed to customize Lean to local contexts, this triggered some pitfalls to the normalization of Lean in practice (e.g., feelings of disconnect, negative perceptions, resistance to Lean and a lack of support for Lean).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…Phase 1 consisted of initial program theory development. Phase 2 consisted of a realist review to further develop and refine our initial program theory [22]. Phase 3, reported in this paper, was a realist evaluation to test and refine our program theory and context (C) + mechanism (M) = outcome (O) configurations (CMOcs) developed during phase 1 and 2 of this research.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This tool allows for assessment of multiple study designs concurrently, it has theoretical and content validity and it has also been tested for efficiency and reliability 41 42. To assess relevance, each document will be scored as one of the following categories (adopted from Wozney et al 43 and Flynn et al 44): (1) low/no contribution; (2) medium contribution or (3) high contribution. Evidence will also be assessed as either objective (empirical) or subjective (anecdotal).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…high (both high), medium (poor relevance or rigour) and low quality (both poor). Besides, the two researchers independently evaluated the methodological quality of each study using a systematic mixed method appraisal tool (MMAT; Supplementary File S3), which was Flynn et al, 2018;Pluye et al, 2009;Wozney et al, 2017). However, we did not exclude any articles of relatively poor quality so that future researchers could review all of the included studies.…”
Section: Source Selection and Quality Appraisalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The eligibility criteria of included studies were based on the rigour and relevance of the realist review (Pawson et al., 2005) and the included articles were divided into three grades, accordingly: high (both high), medium (poor relevance or rigour) and low quality (both poor). Besides, the two researchers independently evaluated the methodological quality of each study using a systematic mixed method appraisal tool (MMAT; Supplementary File S3), which was a standard tool for quality evaluation of mixed methodology, qualitative and quantitative studies, with a scoring range of 0–100% (100% if all evaluation standards were met; Flynn et al., 2018; Pluye et al., 2009; Wozney et al., 2017). However, we did not exclude any articles of relatively poor quality so that future researchers could review all of the included studies.…”
Section: The Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%