Applying Methods of Process Improvement to Improve Productivity
Consider the following scenario:
Terry is a senior histology lab technician at a large urban hospital. He is responsible for overseeing a team of
six junior technicians to process samples for testing. Recently, the hospital has introduced a new process
whereby the senior histology lab technician must visually accept and approve the findings of the junior
technicians in order for samples to be cleared and entered into the electronic health record for disease
diagnosis. Terry has been able to meet this new need for the past few months. However, as more cases are
entering the histology lab, cases have started to become backlogged. Additionally, the histology lab hours are
restricted to business hours; this has severely impacted the processing of histology samples. Terry is worried
that the approval process is not efficient and that perhaps a second senior histology lab technician should be
hired to meet around-the-clock demand.
As a current or future health care administrator, how might you address the productivity lag in the histology lab
in the scenario?
For this Assignment, review Case 2, “Noninvasive Cardiovascular Laboratory” in Chapter 8 of the text,
Managing Health Services Organizations and Systems. Reflect on how you, as a current or future health care
administrator, might be required to identify opportunities to improve productivity in an HSO. What types of
information might you need to gather? How might you identify whether a process improvement opportunity
exists? Then, review the Week 3 Case Questions document in this week’s Learning Resources to complete the
Assignment.
The Assignment (3–5 pages):
Complete the case questions presented.
Create a fish bone diagram and a flow diagram that represent an analysis of the processes for improvement
and implementation approaches to support your answers to the case questions.
Be sure to support your answers with support from the literature.
Longest, B. B., Jr., & Darr, K. J. (2014). Managing health services organizations and systems (6th ed.).
Baltimore, MD: Health Professions Press.
Chapter 8, “The Quality Imperative: Implementation” (pp. 367–420)

