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Free Weekly Strategic Value Analysis Newsletter

 

 

          September 26, 2003         

 

Effective Equipment Asset Management

Saves BIG Dollars & Makes REAL Sense

 In Lean Times

by Robert T. Yokl, President

 

“Equipment Asset Management Requires A High Degree of Organization,

Discipline And Out Of The Box Thinking To Be Operationally Effective.”

Of all the management disciplines that a healthcare organization needs to master to remain competitive in these lean times, we have observed that Equipment Asset Management is one of the weakest areas of healthcare operations.  Yet, clinicians depend on the millions of dollars of equipment that they utilize daily to treat their patients to be operationally effective at a moments notice.

As a point of reference, 98% of the clients we work with can’t even provide us with a complete list of their equipment maintenance contracts for the hundreds of preventive maintenance and service contracts they purchase annually. Nor, can they tell us if routine and preventive maintenance is actually being performed under the contracts that they do have records on. From our experience, these routine and PM services aren’t being performed by all contractors, but our clients are paying for the service anyway!

I ask you, how can we value justify and continue to manage our equipment assets this way any longer?

 

Must Be Organized To Save And Improve Quality

To turn around this embarrassing situation the following procedures need to be instituted by healthcare executives:

1. All preventive maintenance contracts and service contracts of any kind MUST be centralized under the office of the director of material management. This is the logical place to retain them since material management should be the department that negotiates these contracts in the first place.

2. All contracts MUST be assigned a purchase order number prior to payment by the accounts payable department.  All invoices that are submitted to accounts payable without a purchase order are to be sent to the material management department for investigation.

3. The material management department MUST send a questionnaire to all of the using department for all service contracts, three months prior to their renewal, asking users if they are happy with the contract and if the contractor has met the terms and conditions of the contract. Examples of questions would be: have they provided the necessary PMs, were they prompt in responding to service calls, were parts available when required, etc.

These three steps will resolve the challenge that all healthcare organizations face of not being able to generate a complete list of preventive maintenance contracts and service contracts on demand.

 

Must Be Disciplined To Improve Quality And Save

Preventive maintenance and service contacts have a way of multiplying exponentially in scope and in dollars if not managed and controlled effectively. We have recent proof of this with one of our client who didn’t know that their facilities management contract was costing them twice what their contract terms and conditions suggested, because they (1) had lost their original contract written in 1997 and addendums written every year up to 2003, (2) approved all invoices submitted by their contractor every month, even though they were a higher cost than their contract price had spelled out, and (3) never calculated the true cost of this contract until we analyzed the total cost for them.

Therefore, contracts shouldn’t be treated like any other commodity purchase, but instead -- due to their length (we frequently see service contracts with a term of five to eight years) and complexity -- should be managed by one highly disciplined individual in every healthcare organization. Preferably, these contracts need to be managed by a professional contract manager in large healthcare organizations and by the MMs or purchasing managers in small healthcare organizations.

 

Must Think Outside The Box To Improve Quality And Save

There are many viable options available to healthcare organizations to manage their equipment preventive maintenance and service contracts (maintenance insurance, self-insurance, time and material, multi-vendor contracts, third-party service organizations, outsource and in-house programs). Yet most healthcare organizations only utilize one or two of these alternatives to manage their equipment assets as opposed to employing all of these solutions under a corporate-wide Equipment Asset Management Program that would embrace the concept of self-insurance as the primary method of delivering these services.

Based on the self-insurance philosophy, each piece of equipment that needs to be maintained would be evaluated based on its service history and other users actuarial experience and then one of the above service options would be selected as an appropriate fit for this equipment’s service requirements.  By following this decision path rather than selecting just one or two service alternatives for all of your equipment, you will find that your equipment maintenance cost will be dramatically reduced by 20% to 25% and your service quality will also improve if you think outside the box.

 

Click Here to Access the NO Obligation Free Non-Salary Survey to find out what your savings opportunities are for your organization.

 

About the Author

Robert T. Yokl, President, The HCP Group, Ltd., has over 35 years of experience as a consultant and manager in the field of Supply Value Chain Management and is one of the country's leading healthcare experts in value analysis, value engineering, Non Salary Expense Reduction and materials management. He is the developer and program leader of the award winning Certified Value Analysis Practitioner Training Program™. Mr. Yokl is also the developer of the healthcare industry's leading ValueNetCentral™ Value Analysis Software. Over the past two decades he has trained thousands of healthcare managers in his patented Strategic Value Analysis™ and Team-Based Project Management™ processes and has assisted scores of organizations in developing their own value management programs. He has published six books, videos and audios on supply/value chain management. His latest book being, “ Strategic Value Analysis™: The #1 Smart Strategy for Taking Cost Out of a Healthcare Organizations’ Healthcare Supply Value Chain”.

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