Characterization of laboratory flow and performance for process improvements via application of process mining

Eline Tsai, Andrei Tintu, Richard Boucherie, Yolanda de Rijke, Hans Schotman, Derya Demirtas

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: The rising level of laboratory automation provides an increasing number of logged events that can be used for the characterization of laboratory performance and process improvements. This abundance of data is often underutilized for improving laboratory efficiency. Objectives: The first aim of this descriptive study is to provide a structured approach for transforming raw laboratory data to data that is suitable for process mining. The second aim is to describe a process mining approach for mapping and characterizing the sample flow in a clinical chemistry laboratory to identify areas for improvement in the testing process. Methods: Data were extracted from instrument log files and the middleware between laboratory instruments and IT infrastructure. Process mining was used for automated process discovery and analysis. Laboratory performance was quantified in terms of relevant key performance indicators (KPIs): turnaround time, timeliness, workload, work-in-process and machine downtime. Results: The method was applied to two Dutch university hospital clinical chemistry laboratories. We identified areas where alternative routes might increase laboratory efficiency and observed the negative effects of machine downtime on laboratory performance. This encourages the laboratory to review sample routes in its analyzer lines, the routes of high priority samples during instrument downtime, as well as the preventive maintenance policy. Conclusions: This paper provides the first application of process mining to event data from a medical diagnostic laboratory for automated process model discovery. Our study shows that process mining, with the use of relevant KPIs, provides valuable insights for laboratories that motivates the disclosure and increased utilization of laboratory event data, which in turn drive the analytical staff to intervene in the process to achieve the set performance goals. Our approach is vendor independent and widely applicable for all medical diagnostic laboratories.
Original languageEnglish
JournalApplied Clinical Informatics
Early online date2022
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2022

Keywords

  • Process mining
  • clinical chemistry
  • key performance indicators
  • laboratory logistics
  • process discovery

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