Six Sigma in European public health care : a proposed comparable model

Six Sigma is commonly applied and well established in the manufacturing sector, especially in the USA. Since the beginning of the 1990s several public administrations, particularly in the field of health care, have also been implementing Six Sigma. In Europe, public health care is very different fro...

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Main Author: Chiarini, A.
Other Authors: Mcauley, John ; Al-Shaghana, Kadim
Published: Sheffield Hallam University 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575500
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5755002018-09-05T03:31:40ZSix Sigma in European public health care : a proposed comparable modelChiarini, A.Mcauley, John ; Al-Shaghana, Kadim2011Six Sigma is commonly applied and well established in the manufacturing sector, especially in the USA. Since the beginning of the 1990s several public administrations, particularly in the field of health care, have also been implementing Six Sigma. In Europe, public health care is very different from US health care in terms of organisation and its relationship with stakeholders. A specific Six Sigma model for European public health care is missing from the literature. In order to gain real advantages for such a health care system it is worth analysing, discussing and designing a possible dedicated model and comparing it with the manufacturing one. The idea of such a comparison has originated from the Italian public health care system. In fact the Italian health care sector has a mission and values, a culture, an organisation, strategies and processes that are often very different from the production sector. However, many of these differences can also be found in European public health care. As described in the first chapter, among the European systems there are fundamental common features that can justify a dedicated research. In order to achieve the aim, the thesis has been conducted in two stages. Although the thesis is primarily deductive, the first stage is typically inductive and the second one is deductive. A third minor stage based on qualitative-inductive methods helps to put the finishing touches to the proposed model by showing the differences from the manufacturing model and the features of the European system. The final model attempts to make new contributions to the literature by primarily bringing knowledge to the stakeholders in the academic field and secondarily to the practitioners. The main contribution is surely a roadmap for shaping a missing Six Sigma model for European public health care.362.1094Sheffield Hallam Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575500http://shura.shu.ac.uk/20642/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
topic 362.1094
spellingShingle 362.1094
Chiarini, A.
Six Sigma in European public health care : a proposed comparable model
description Six Sigma is commonly applied and well established in the manufacturing sector, especially in the USA. Since the beginning of the 1990s several public administrations, particularly in the field of health care, have also been implementing Six Sigma. In Europe, public health care is very different from US health care in terms of organisation and its relationship with stakeholders. A specific Six Sigma model for European public health care is missing from the literature. In order to gain real advantages for such a health care system it is worth analysing, discussing and designing a possible dedicated model and comparing it with the manufacturing one. The idea of such a comparison has originated from the Italian public health care system. In fact the Italian health care sector has a mission and values, a culture, an organisation, strategies and processes that are often very different from the production sector. However, many of these differences can also be found in European public health care. As described in the first chapter, among the European systems there are fundamental common features that can justify a dedicated research. In order to achieve the aim, the thesis has been conducted in two stages. Although the thesis is primarily deductive, the first stage is typically inductive and the second one is deductive. A third minor stage based on qualitative-inductive methods helps to put the finishing touches to the proposed model by showing the differences from the manufacturing model and the features of the European system. The final model attempts to make new contributions to the literature by primarily bringing knowledge to the stakeholders in the academic field and secondarily to the practitioners. The main contribution is surely a roadmap for shaping a missing Six Sigma model for European public health care.
author2 Mcauley, John ; Al-Shaghana, Kadim
author_facet Mcauley, John ; Al-Shaghana, Kadim
Chiarini, A.
author Chiarini, A.
author_sort Chiarini, A.
title Six Sigma in European public health care : a proposed comparable model
title_short Six Sigma in European public health care : a proposed comparable model
title_full Six Sigma in European public health care : a proposed comparable model
title_fullStr Six Sigma in European public health care : a proposed comparable model
title_full_unstemmed Six Sigma in European public health care : a proposed comparable model
title_sort six sigma in european public health care : a proposed comparable model
publisher Sheffield Hallam University
publishDate 2011
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575500
work_keys_str_mv AT chiarinia sixsigmaineuropeanpublichealthcareaproposedcomparablemodel
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