The U.S. Health Care Problem: ISO 9001 Can Help
| by Steve Flick | ||||
There are few people in the U.S. — and not a lot more around the world — who are unaware of the health care insurance crisis in this country. The answer, for whatever reason, is as it always has been: let’s make a law!
But what kind of law? ”Too many people are without health care insurance!”, cries one side. ”We can’t have ‘socialized medicine’!”, cries the other side.
“We must seek compromise!”, cries a voice from the middle. Politics is the art of compromise, right? If compromise is “the art of dividing a cake in such a way that everyone believes that he or she has the biggest piece” (bonus points if you can guess who said that)…yes, I suppose politics could be an answer.
In reality, we know it is not. We know that whoever writes the laws stands to gain the most if those laws are passed. This is true not just of the USA, but of every country on the planet.
There is an effective solution out there that we seem to be conveniently overlooking. That solution is ISO 9001, “Quality Management Systems-Requirements”. According to the standard, key to an effective quality management system is meeting — or exceeding — customer requirements. The product — in this case, health care insurance — must satisfy customer requirements above all. The customer is so important that three clauses are devoted exclusively to the customer: clauses 5.2 (Customer Focus), 7.2 (Customer-Related Processes), and 8.2.1 (Customer Satisfaction).
And just who is the customer of health care insurance? Well, who’s supposed to be reaping the benefits of the product? There are two customers, actually…
- The people being insured, and
- The health care providers.
Who aren’t customers? Pharmaceutical companies, medical equipment manufacturers, lawmakers, lobbyists, ad nauseam. My advice to President Obama — and to any other world leader, for that matter — is to develop a health care system that complies with the requirements of ISO 9001, and ignore anyone and everyone who calls for legislation. Don’t forget — the ones insisting that legislation is the answer are often the ones who stand to profit the most from it.
Whether you agree or not, let me know what you think.
Categories:
Customer Quality • ISO Quality Standards
Tags:
customer focus • customer requirements • customer satisfaction • customer-related processes • health care • ISO 9001 • voice of the customer
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Originally published in 2009 by Bizmanualz, Inc. under the title The U.S. Health Care Problem: ISO 9001 Can Help. All rights reserved. Reproduction permitted with attribution only. www.bizmanualz.com
2 Responses to “The U.S. Health Care Problem: ISO 9001 Can Help”
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July 28th, 2009 at 2:38 am
I am writing from Zambia, one of the countries in Africa. I totally agree with you. I wish many a national leaders can take a look at the ISO 9001 Standard and discover what a helpfull tool it can be in ensuring compliance to requirements and improvement of service provision to their nationals. And health care is one of such services.
July 28th, 2009 at 11:12 am
Would it be better to go directly to the top — to the leaders — or to collect support at the “grass-roots” level and use larger numbers to push the issue to the top?