PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Wade Stewart AU - Tom Stipe TI - 838 Continuous improvement effort shown to be worth its weight in blood AID - 10.1136/bmjoq-2017-IHI.2 DP - 2017 Dec 01 TA - BMJ Open Quality PG - A2--A2 VI - 6 IP - Suppl 1 4099 - http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/6/Suppl_1/A2.1.short 4100 - http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/6/Suppl_1/A2.1.full SO - BMJ Open Qual2017 Dec 01; 6 AB - Background The Department of Pathology identified an opportunity to optimise specimen turn-around-time (TAT) to meet customer expectation (patient and providers). More than 10% of the blood specimen are not resulted within the 60 min customer expectation. The team focused on the top five specimen analytes representing over 80% of the volume through the lab. The team followed the DMAIC process to utilising Lean and Six Sigma tools to identify predicted and unpredicted opportunities in specimen processing.Objectives Optimised specimen turn-around to create a process that meet customer expectation of=60 mins 95% of the time.Methods Implementation of project improvements by the team included a daily shift huddles using a common format with visual controls, supervisor standard work to view huddles weekly, elimination of multiple non-value activities (e.g., specimen initializing), level loading, cross-training, and the identification of a daily ‘Flow Master’ to communicate issues in real-time. These combined improvements yielded significant TAT reductions in all 5 tests. The improvements in TAT among the five test ranged from 8% to 26%.View this table:Abstract 838 Table 1 Conclusions Since the implementation of solutions the laboratory continues to track and maintain improvements. A control plan is in place to evaluate laboratory performance when it is out of specification and action is required. This project clearly demonstrated that improvements can be magnified when used in combination with Lean Six Sigma methodology and tools.