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Chapter 10 Quality Improvement.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 10 Quality Improvement."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 10 Quality Improvement

2 Traditional Economic Model of Quality of Conformance
Total cost Cost due to nonconformance Cost of quality assurance 100% “optimal level” of quality

3 Modern Economic Model of Quality of Conformance
Total cost Cost due to nonconformance Cost of quality assurance 100%

4 Problem Solving Problem: any deviation between what “should be” and what “is” that is important enough to need correcting Structured Semistructured Ill-structured Problem Solving: the activity associated with changing the state of what “is” to what “should be”

5 Quality Problem Types Conformance problems
Unstructured performance problems Efficiency problems Product design problems Process design problems

6 Problem Solving Process
Redefining and analyzing the problem Generating ideas Evaluating and selecting ideas Implementing ideas

7 The Deming Cycle Act Plan Study Do

8 Juran’s Improvement Program
Proof of the need Project identification Organization for breakthrough Diagnostic journey Remedial journey Holding the gains

9 Bethesda Hospital Model
Start Review current situation Describe process Explore cause theories Collect and analyze data Improvement? Generate solutions Plan Do Check Improvement? Act no no yes yes

10 Crosby Quality Improvement Program
Management commitment Quality improvement team Quality measurement Cost of quality evaluation Quality awareness Corrective action Zero defect committee Supervisor training Zero defects day Goal setting Error cause removal Recognition Quality councils Do it over again

11 Creative Problem Solving
Mess Finding – identify symptoms Fact Finding – gather data; operational definitions Problem Finding – find the root cause Idea Finding – brainstorming Solution Finding – evaluate ideas and proposals Implementation – make the solution work

12 Six-Sigma Quality Ensuring that process variation is half the design tolerance (Cp = 2.0) while allowing the mean to shift as much as 1.5 standard deviations.

13 Six-Sigma Metrics Defects per unit (DPU) = number of defects discovered  number of units produced Defects per million opportunities (dpmo) = DPU  1,000,000  opportunities for error

14 k-Sigma Quality Levels
Six sigma results in at most 3.4 defects per million opportunities

15 Six-Sigma Implementation
Emphasize dpmo as a standard metric Provide extensive training Focus on on corporate sponsor support Create qualified process improvement experts Ensure identification of appropriate metrics Set stretch objectives

16 GE’s Six-Sigma Problem Solving Approach
Define Measure Analyze Improve Control DMAIC

17 Tools for Six-Sigma and Quality Improvement
Elementary statistics Advanced statistics Product design and reliability Measurement Process control Process improvement Implementation and teamwork

18 The Seven QC Tools Flowcharts Check sheets Histograms
Cause-and-effect diagrams Pareto diagrams Scatter diagrams Control charts

19 Flowcharts Shows unexpected complexity, problem areas, redundancy, unnecessary loops, and where simplification may be possible Compares and contrasts actual versus ideal flow of a process Allows a team to reach agreement on process steps and identify activities that may impact performance Serves as a training tool

20 Run Chart Monitors performance of one or more processes over time to detect trends, shifts, or cycles Allows a team to compare performance before and after implementation of a solution to measure its impact Focuses attention on truly vital changes in the process * * * * * *

21 Control Chart Focuses attention on detecting and monitoring process variation over time Distinguishes special from common causes of variation Serves as a tool for on-going control Provides a common language for discussion process performance * * * * * *

22 Check Sheet Creates easy-to-understand data
Builds, with each observation, a clearer picture of the facts Forces agreement o the definition of each condition or event of interest Makes patterns in the data become obvious quickly xx xxxxxx x

23 Pareto Diagram Helps a team focus on causes that have the greatest impact Displays the relative importance of problems in a simple visual format Helps prevent “shifting the problem” where the solution removes some causes but worsens others

24 Histogram Displays large amounts of data that are difficult to interpret in tabular form Shows centering, variation, and shape Illustrates the underlying distribution of the data Provides useful information for predicting future performance Helps to answer the question “Is the process capable of meeting requirements?

25 Cause and Effect Diagram
Enables a team to focus on the content of a problem, not on the history of the problem or differing personal interests of team members Creates a snapshot of collective knowledge and consensus of a team; builds support for solutions Focuses the team on causes, not symptoms Effect Cause

26 Scatter Diagram Supplies the data to confirm a hypothesis that two variables are related Provides both a visual and statistical means to test the strength of a relationship Provides a good follow-up to cause and effect diagrams * * * * *

27 Poka-Yoke (Mistake-Proofing)
An approach for mistake-proofing processes using automatic devices or methods to avoid simple human or machine error, such as forgetfulness, misunderstanding, errors in identification, lack of experience, absentmindedness, delays, or malfunctions

28 Poka-Yoke Examples (from John Grout’s Poka-Yoke Page)


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