Mark Schriek’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Figure 1. Research procedure.  
Figure 2. The structure of the maturity model.
A Maturity Model for Care Pathways
  • Conference Paper
  • Full-text available

June 2016

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729 Reads

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25 Citations

Mark Schriek

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Over the last recent decades, increasing the quality of healthcare services while reducing costs has been among the top concerns in the healthcare landscape. Several healthcare institutions have initiated improvement programs and invested considerably in process orientation and management. Care pathways are receiving increasing attention from clinicians, healthcare managers, and academics, as a way to standardize healthcare processes to improve the safety, quality, and efficiency of healthcare services. Despite considerable literature on the definition of care pathways, to date there is no agreement on their key process characteristics and the way they traverse from an immature to a mature state. Such a model would guide healthcare institutions to assess pathways' level of maturity and generate a roadmap for improving towards higher levels. In this paper, we propose a maturity model for care pathways that is constructed taking a generic business process maturity model as a basis. The model was refined through a Delphi study with nine domain experts to address healthcare domain specific concerns. To evaluate its validity, we applied it in assessing the maturity of a particular care pathway taking place in 11 healthcare institutions. The results indicate the usefulness of the proposed model in assessing pathway's maturity and its potential to provide guidance for its improvement.

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Citations (1)


... It has been demonstrated that successful adaptions of generic MMs require adoption of the domain terminology and adequate descriptions of the categories [39]. Schriek et al. report that the application of generic business process MMs to healthcare processes holds several challenges due to problems addressing specific facets of the healthcare domain [40]. It is also difficult to fully compare healthcare organisations with "typical" organisations in service and manufacturing industries, characterised by loosely coupled sets of highly specialised silos with their own incentive mechanisms [41]. ...

Reference:

Development of a maturity model for demand and capacity management in healthcare
A Maturity Model for Care Pathways