From Cook-Chill to Room Service on Demand
When Methodist converted its patient
meal production to room service in 2005, the move entailed a
retrofit of one of two tray lines (the other still supplies select
menu service to ICU patients and others for whom it is necessary).
The switch was made easier because the hospital had had the tray
line assembly area
designed to accommodate some in-line cooking, which greatly
facilitated the conversion.
In the planning stage, a lot of effort was expended to educate
Methodist’s administration about how the program would be
implemented, says FSD Vanessa Robinson. “The most
difficult part of the transition was training staff in the use of
the equipment and in the subtleties of the new menu system,”
she adds.
“You have a whole department of people accustomed to doing
things a certain way. Now you are going to infuse the whole
department with new processes. Some individuals need new
skills because room service requires a lot more interaction with
the patients.”
The department posted detailed job descriptions for the new
roles, invited comments from staff and interviewied employees to
find those who would be the best fit for the new
positions.
“The hospital was very supportive,” Robinson says.
“The plan called for keeping the change FTE-neutral, and the
HR and compensation groups worked closely with us to ensure that
the
restructuring of existing positions went smoothly.”
Patient services manager Elmira Gage, a Methodist hospital
veteran of 27 years, took on the job of working with and training
those who were ultimately selected to staff the new call center and
floor host/hostess system.
The transition was managed in stages, migrating about 200
patients to the new model in stage one, then adding 100 more
patients in each subsequent stage. Almost 600 patients use the room
service program daily now, with meals delivered within 45 minutes
of order placement.
Because the goal was to manage the transition so costs were flat
before and after, “reducing waste in the production cycle was
critical” Robinson says. That meant designing a menu with
items that could be efficiently produced in varying quantities to
match daily production forecasts, with final production fine-tuned
on the fly.
Bulk, cook-chill production is still used for some components
like soups and sauces, but “for practical purposes, there is
very little overlap between production for patient meals and that
used for retail,” Robinson says.
Breakfast and lunch room service is provided floor-by-floor by
host attendants who are on duty from 6:00 p.m. -2:30 p.m.. The
evening meal is handled in a 4:30 - 7:30 p.m. window on a
tower-by-tower (there are five) basis, rather than floor-by-floor.
It is structured so that many meals are pre-ordered in consultation
with the floor attendants earlier in the afternoon.
“That helps us forecast evening production more accurately and lets our evening room service team focus on deliveries and handling new patient admissions,” Robinson says.
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