
The example he gave was that of a group of emergency room doctors who took lessons from the planning and precision tactics of the Ferrari Formula One race team. Now an Italian newspaper, Il Giomale reports that a surgical team from a British Hospital actually reached out to the Italians. As reported in LunchoverIP:
"The post-operation phase is probably the most sensitive, and until a couple of years ago it was chaotic: there was a lot of noise, everyone moved around with no coordination with the others: we've totally redesigned our way of working", he says. The Ferrari people filmed the doctors at work, then dissected the images with them. "For years we've been convinced that we were doing things pretty well, but seeing the tape it was shocking to notice our lack of coordination", says Nick Pigott of the intensive-care unit.
The Ferrarists gave suggestions on people's training, disposition, synchronization, and how to codify effective and time-saving procedures. Elliott told the journalist that the cross-pollination "has transformed the intensive-care unit in a center of silent precision" where "the complications of operations have been substantially reduced".
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