{"id":1788,"date":"2019-07-21T17:58:39","date_gmt":"2019-07-22T00:58:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.landport.net\/?p=1788"},"modified":"2019-07-21T18:02:13","modified_gmt":"2019-07-22T01:02:13","slug":"7-ways-to-advance-your-health-facilities-management","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.landport.net\/7-ways-to-advance-your-health-facilities-management\/","title":{"rendered":"7 Ways to Advance Your Health Facilities Management"},"content":{"rendered":"
U.S. healthcare costs skyrocketed to $3.65 trillion<\/a> in 2018, 59% of which went to hospitals, doctors, and clinical services. And, Hospital facilities continue to face increased pressure to contain costs<\/a> today.\u00a0What is behind this margin squeeze?<\/p>\n Often, managers hear the language of business and industry, not patient care, and pushes to cut process inefficiencies and labor costs are normal. Adapting business cost-control practices to patient care management can seem counter-intuitive, however a disciplined approach to managing processes for building maintenance is logical. And, some gains in efficiency can have big effects on the bottom line.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Healthcare facilities management covers a gamut of functions. For example:<\/p>\n All of these are the purview of a facilities management professional. Health facilities managers are healthcare managers, too, so as such, they look towards code compliance. Local, state, and federal regulations govern healthcare. Managers answer to an alphabet soup of entities, EPA, OSHA, HIPAA, CDC and more.<\/p>\n Most facilities managers also have certifications to maintain from places such as the American Hospital Association, building management associations, and engineering organizations.<\/p>\n Health facilities managers have bottom-line budget responsibilities. They set the spending priorities for maintenance and negotiate service agreements. They coordinate and calendar all the work to keep a facility going.\u00a0Facility managers often manage dozens of staff members and vendors, although they sometimes roll up their sleeves to sweep a sidewalk or open a stuck window.<\/p>\n The team ensures the quality of services and processes to support patient care. As bottom-line pressure on hospitals increases, everyone looks for ways to cut costs. Reduction of inefficiencies or other work optimizations can bring big savings.<\/p>\n Seamless sharing of maintenance information makes processes more efficient. One easy message system separate from the medical records system is ideal.\u00a0It should be easy and efficient for staff members to report equipment or facilities issues. The communication should be short and direct to maintenance management. Work requests and work orders need not go all the way up the chain and back down.<\/p>\n Consider how many people need to relay requests and feedback to a member of the facilities team. Streamlining improves efficiency and saves time.<\/p>\n Whenever a staff member recognizes a maintenance problem, they should report it. For a swift resolution, a unit manager can initiate a work request<\/a> and schedule a repair, and a centralized platform can speed up this process. It keeps track of the maintenance status of system failures. It can also keep track of regular failure points for action.<\/p>\n High standards in hospital housekeeping are crucial. Cleanliness, safety and infection control are top priorities of patient care. Look at organization, standardization, provision of consumables, and functionality.\u00a0Where possible, simplify procedures, automate tasks, and provision lists.<\/p>\n Standardized housekeeping and maintenance stock means economies of scale for purchases. This extends far from types of hand sanitizer or surgical scrubs. Look for ways to limit the variety of filters, replacement acoustic tiles, etc.<\/p>\n Efficient maintenance depends on manager awareness. Use software to keep track of the quantity, condition, and location of assets. Use of electronic tagging reduces the need for cumbersome lists and inventory checks.<\/p>\n With the help of software you can keep important information on equipment records like the description, installation date, serial number or the expected run time. And, you will have access to data to help you calculate run costs and cost\/benefit ratios on things like replacement equipment that is often repaired or worn out.<\/p>\n Health facilities managers can find it difficult to implement preventive maintenance strategies. Emergency repairs or routine equipment monitoring often prevents scheduling.\u00a0Equipment malfunctions and damage from overuse can happen, especially without a simple rotation and scheduling system in place.<\/p>\n Use scheduling tools to assign daily or periodic tasks for your staff and vendors. Take an organized and proactive approach to maintenance to prolong facility and equipment life.<\/p>\n It is impossible to control labor costs or the maintenance budget without accurate and timely information. Facilities maintenance depends on many people and systems. The first step in improving efficiency is to automate manual processes.<\/p>\n\n
Read on for seven ways to advance your health facilities management program.<\/strong><\/h2>\n
Facilities Management Basics<\/h3>\n
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Optimize Health Facilities Management of Maintenance Tasks<\/h3>\n
1. Open Up Communication<\/h3>\n
2. Failure Resolution Fast<\/h3>\n
3. Streamline Housekeeping<\/h3>\n
4. Exercise Stock Control<\/h3>\n
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5. Track Equipment<\/h3>\n
6. Improve Scheduling and Calendars<\/h3>\n
7. Use Health Facilities Management Software<\/h3>\n