explain, operations management

Multiple Questions
Answer each question in 110 words or less.

In your own words explain, operations management?

In your own words, what is Total Quality Management?

In your own words, explain three quality costs.

What is a bullwhip effect? What are the causes?

What is a strategic partnership? Give an example.

Explain a the challenges of outsourcing.

What is a balance sheet? How does it support business?

Identify a source of business financing.

Should a start-up organization invest in an IS immediately? Why or why not

What is database management?

operations planning

operations planning

Your company has just acquired a new subsidiary that makes two products, Clodhopper and Clodbuster. The Clodhopper is intended for the general consumer market and its demand is higher and more seasonal than the Clodbuster, which is intended for the commercial user market. Both products share a number of component parts and subassemblies, primarily differing in their engine and tiller subassemblies. All of the managers at the acquired company quit the day your company took possession. You are the person who has been assigned to run this acquisition. Since all of the managers quit, the only planning information you have is historical data.

Assignment:
Your task is to create two aggregate plans for 2015: a plan using the chase strategy, and a plan using the mixed strategy (level production with inventory).
• Use the aggregate planning form supplied and print the spreadsheets (landscape) one to a page. Spreadsheets must be formatted to fit the entire spreadsheet on a single page. Fill in all appropriate data, including the title of the plan.
• Do not make any changes to the format/layout of the spreadsheet. This is one place in industry where creativity in presenting data is not appreciated since many of the cells in the forms are normally linked, and changes can lead to significant errors in the results.
• Size the printout so that it fills the page from side-to-side (no extraneous white space). Delete extraneous items from your printout (e.g. “Use this form for your
aggregate plans”). Check and correct your printout for cut-off words, e.g.

• Plans must follow the requirements exactly. Do not attempt to make your plans “better” by changing the planning strategy (for example, if the chase plan requires firing everyone one month and hiring them back the next month, show that in your plan
• Plans must meet all the operating constraints given in the “Part 1 Data” section below.
• Use the comment function to show the formula for Shipments. This must cover the case for months when supply exceeds demand, and the case for months when demand exceeds supply. (Review – New comment – Show all comments ** and ** Page layout – Page setup [click on dialog box launcher in lower right corner] – Sheet – Comments – As displayed on sheet). Handwritten notes are not acceptable.
• Use the header function to show your name in the upper right corner of both plans (Print preview – Page setup – Header/footer – Custom header).
• Create a cover page (portrait) using the format below. Note that the cost/unit produced is the total cost (staffing, hire/fire, inventory/backlog, and material cost).

Fill in the cover page

I recommendf

• Submit your completed assignment with the cover page (executive summary), the chase plan as the second page, and the mixed plan as the third page. Staple portrait pages in the upper left corner and landscape pages in the upper right corner as shown:

Staple Staple

Part 1 Data:
Use the forecast provided and the following information to create your aggregate plans:
? Values in the spreadsheet (demand, production rates, staffing levels, etc.) are to be number of units or people (not $). They are to be expressed in whole numbers (no decimal values). Costs will appear in the last row and the upper right hand corner of the spreadsheet only. Cost calculations, of course, will need to retain at least 2 decimal points (cents) but whole $ should be reported.
? Assume 20 production days per month (4 weeks of 5 days each)
? The production level in December 2013 was 6000 units per month
? The ending inventory level for December 2013 (8400 units) is the beginning inventory for January 2014
? Desired safety stock inventory level is 1000 units, but this level to subject to the other operating constraints
? Desired inventory at the end of the year (after December 2014 demand is satisfied) is 2000 units, but this level is subject to the other operating constraints
? The maximum level of inventory that the firm can store at one time is 19,500 units
? The maximum level of production in the facility in any month is 24,000 units.
? You must use whole people – there are no part time employees. Employees do not produce more per month than is required by the plan.
? The chase plan and the mixed (level production with inventory) plan are to consider only regular production (employees working 40 hours per week with no overtime).
? Plans must meet all forecasted demand for the year.

? Cost Information:
Inventory holding cost $7 per unit per month based on ending inventory for month
Backorder cost $9 per unit per month based on ending backorder level in a month
Costs of hiring one additional employee $4000
Costs of firing one employee $2500
Average pay rate $8 an hour
Labor to produce one unit 80 minutes (one employee can produce 120 units per month)
Material cost to produce one unit $31

Additional information:
? If you can not meet all forecast demand in a month, ship everything that you can (do not hold safety stock if you are in backlog). Show any shortfall as backlog, not as negative inventory (e.g. short by 200 units: on-hand inventory = 0, backlog = 200, [inventory – backlog] = –200).
? Show backlog as a cumulative total (e.g. if the following month you are short an additional 300 units, backlog would be 500 units, and [inventory – backlog] would be –500. Ship the backlog when you can.
? Materials units = Regular production units (show units, not $ in this column). This column is included so that the cost calculations will be straightforward (total cost = staffing cost + hire cost + fire cost + inventory cost + backlog cost + material cost)
? Show all cost calculations in the bottom row, and show the total cost in the upper right corner of the spreadsheet.

Prescription, Nonprescription and Herbal Medications: Exploring Interactions in the Geriatric Population

Prescription, Nonprescription and Herbal Medications: Exploring Interactions in the Geriatric Population
Purpose: To examine the issue of polypharmacy in the geriatric population. Drug therapy in the elderly presents a special challenge as older patients are more sensitive to drugs and demonstrate wider individual responses.

CONTENT REQUIREMENTS:

Introduction: Student is to address current demographics of the geriatric population (numbers by age group over 50 years of age, gender, marital status, ethnicity, household income, educational level, etc. Address any demographic information you believe impacts or influences an elderly persons participation in a medication regimen.

Section I: Discuss specific physiologic changes that occur with aging and how those changes affect absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion of drugs.

Section 2: Delineate factors that predispose older patients to adverse drug reactions.

Section 3: 1. Select two of the following classes of medications (analgesics, antidepressants)

2. Identify 3 commonly prescribed medications in each class – discuss the mechanism of action of each of the medications

3. Identify 3 commonly used nonprescriptive medications from the same class as those meds discussed in Section 3.2() – discuss the mechanism of action of each of the three nonprescription medications (Example: Acetaminophen, Aspirin, Ibuprofen)

4. Identify 3 alternative or complimentary therapies advertised to address the same physiologic needs as the classes of medications identified in Section 3.2. Discuss the mechanism of action of each of the three complimentary therapies.

Section 4: Based on the mechanism of action of each of the classes of medications discussed, describe potential drug interactions about which the NP should question or assess the patient.

Conclusion: Summarize comments

References: Students must include citations from a MINIMUM of 5 peer-reviewed professional nursing journals. Research articles may be included, required textbook is not to be counted as reference. APA format required. Minimum of 10 pages, excluding title page and references.

athletes look physically ill from exhaustion.

During the first day of practice, Coach Park demands that his players run full speed throughout an hour-long scrimmage. He yells at anyone who slacks off. At the end of the practice, some athletes look physically ill from exhaustion.

Think about the scenario below according to the sport and level (youth sport, high school, college) you have coached or desire to coach. Be sure to read the following scenario and determine which of the six training variables is not being correctly applied. Thoughtfully state your recommendations about what needs to be done differently. Answer the questions below using specific reasons which will defend the position that you are taking and your decision rationale

Presentation Stuff

Presentation Stuff
Notes for Presenters
First, remember that this presentation is on the exact same subject as your paper. The content is the same, so there is no need to change anything. All you are doing here is presenting that content through different media. At its core, this presentation should still 1) prove something is a problem, 2) describe a clear, thorough solution(s) to this problem, 3) defend the feasibility of this solution, and 4) address some opposing viewpoints.
Title your presentation. Show us that title (on a slide, in an outline document, on the board, in a handout, etc.) and introduce yourself. Not everyone will know who you are, and they will need to know your name for their audience assignments.
Do not try to “wing” this presentation. Have a plan and structure in place, and be sure to practice your presentation ahead of class. There is a clear expectation for how long your presentation should be (7-20 minutes, depending on solo, partnered, or grouped presentations), so practice your presentation to ensure you meet these expectations.
Just like a paper, the audience should know the purpose of the presentation very quickly. Presentations should not be mysteries. There should be a surprise reveal at the end. Get to the point quickly.
Videos are a perfectly acceptable supplement to your presentation.
• Make sure you have timed how long the videos are and how much of the presentation they are. For a 7-minute presentation, videos should not exceed 2 minutes.
• Make sure your videos are relevant to your subject. Do not simply re-use student presentations you happened to have found on YouTube.
• You are allowed to create your own video and present it to us for the bulk of the presentation, but you will still need to address questions the audience (including me) might have.
• You are responsible for volume, so double check the volume settings before you begin your presentation.
Note cards or some derivative thereof are perfectly acceptable, but do not simply read from these cards. Use your notes to help organize your thoughts and transition you from point to point. Look at the audience regularly. One of the worst things you can do for this presentation is simply print your paper out and read it to us.
Remember that your presentation requires a visual aid. Most people choose a slide presentation or a video, but don’t feel as though this is something you have to do. There are other options. All you need is something visual to help focus the attention of the audience.
Any visual writing in your presentation must be proofread! Avoid grammatical errors and typos in your visual materials.
I strongly urge you to use some kind of visual outline. This could mean writing what you plan to do on the board (I will have markers), having a small Word document that lists bullet points you plan to address, or using a slide in your presentation software. Not only will this help you focus, but it will give your audience a clear set of expectations for the few minutes you present.
If you plan to use presentation software, I recommend one of these:
• PowerPoint – available on campus computers
• Google Presentations/Slides – available via your campus email account
• Prezi (Links to an external site.) – available online at prezi.com (Links to an external site.)
• Haiku Deck – available online at haikudeck.com (Links to an external site.)
Regardless of the presentation software you use, please adhere to the following:
• Do not overload slides with too much text. Keep your slides limited to bullet lists with basic information that you can then expound upon verbally.
• Do not overload a single slide with too many images. Too many images means viewers will be uncertain about where to look.
• Do not overload your presentation with slide animations. Keep dissolves and swirls and bouncing text to a minimum. It’s distracting.
• Keep a uniform font through your slides: one font type and one font size in the body of the slides.
• Title your slides. Practice parallelism when naming.
• Be mindful of color contrast. Make sure the contrast between your font color and slide color is distinct enough to be visible to the audience.
• Embed videos within the slides themselves.
• Included a Works Cited slide that cites not only the content sources from your paper, but also entries for images, graphs, and/or videos you used in your presentation.
• Avoid “Here Are Some Facts” slides that list information without context or direction. Providing facts is a key element, sure, but don’t simply jam all of those facts into a single slide. Present those facts via proper context so as to demonstrate something is a problem, illustrate a potential solution, prove the feasilbity of a solution, or address opposing viewpoints.
You may be required to answer questions. In all likelihood, there will be people in class who disagree with some aspect of your topic and presentation. This does not make them inferior to you. Be prepared for critical questions. Do not be dismissive or insulting towards people who ask these questions. Answer those questions if you can. If you cannot answer the question, do not fake it.
• I might also ask questions, time permitting. Some of these questions might simply be for additional data. Some of these questions might be rhetorical attempts to see how well you address opposing viewpoints.

Notes for audience members:
Any disruptions to one of your peer’s presentations will be met with severe penalties. You will no longer be able to stay in the classroom for the day, marked absent, and potentially receive a zero on your presentation. You will not be allowed to complete the presentation review for that day.
If you come to class late and you see a presentation is already underway, please wait in the hallway until I wave you inside. If you need to step out of the classroom for a minute–for water, bathroom, to accept a phone call, etc., please follow the same procedure of waiting in the hallway until I wave you inside.
If you fall asleep in class, your grade will plummet. Do not fall asleep in class. You will no longer be able to stay in the classroom for the day, marked absent, and potentially receive a zero on your presentation.
Before presentations begin, make sure your phone is turned silent or off.
For each day of presentations, you will be required to pick one presentation to summarize and review in a written document. This review can only be completed if you attended class during the presentation. Unlike other assignments, you will submit your review on paper. Each review will be due the next class day. Reviews should not exceed a typed double space page.
You are permitted to take notes, if you wish, but you must do so the old fashioned way: pen/pencil and paper.
Unless directed by a presenter to do otherwise, you should not use your phones, classroom computers, or any other electronic devices. Monitors should remain off.
If you use an electronic device of any kind without permission or do not provide your undivided attention to the presenter, you will be asked to leave, marked absent for the day, and given a 0 on your presentation. If you’re expecting a call of dire importance that cannot wait until after class, inform me at the start of class, and then quietly excuse yourself to answer that call out in the hall.
Reserve questions for the end of the presentation. Once a presentation ends, time permitting, we will have a question and answer period. This is not your opportunity to add a comment. This is also not your opportunity to belittle or embarrass a peer, demonstrate how brilliant you are, or expose the class to your political platform. Any efforts towards these ends will not be met kindly by me. Either ask a constructive question or remain quiet.
In the broadest and colloquial sense of the word, don’t be jerks.

PsychInfo Search narrowed to approx. 25 “hits”

PsychInfo Search narrowed to approx. 25 “hits”
Choose a topic in psychology that interests you, then narrow the topic by conducting keyword searches using the PsychInfo database. Hand in the narrowed search (a “hit list”) containing 25-30 “hits.”
Hi, You do not need to write a paper, you just need to create a reference or “hit” list which is only a list of sources. If you read the description of the assignment, it explains what you need to do. That is why it is only one or two pages and not more. Does that make sense?

Think of a topic or question in psychology that interests you and search PsychInfo for research reports on this topic. Rework your search words until the search becomes narrow and specific and generates a “hit list” of not more than 20-25 studies. Hand in the printout of your most satisfactory PsychInfo search on the narrowed, clearly defined topic. It MUST be in APA style for references. Links to articles will not be accepted.

Attach a cover sheet with your name, your topic and a paragraph on how you arrived at the current sub-topic.

Before beginning this activity, review the Module Notes and readings on estimating disease risk (you may want to review the study designs in the previous module as well).

Before beginning this activity, review the Module Notes and readings on estimating disease risk (you may want to review the study designs in the previous module as well).

Now that you have learned about the major study designs and how to estimate risk, you are ready to combine this information into estimation and interpretation of epidemiologic data. This assignment builds upon the examples in your previously completed study designs assignment. As you work through each question, remember that the design dictates the appropriate measure of effect to be calculated.

In a MS Word or similar document, with each question numbered, respond to each of the questions below. Be sure to show all of your math. Use standard mathematical operators: divide (/), multiply (x), add (+), and subtract (-), and include parentheses to show the order of operations where necessary.

1. To examine the association between indoor mold exposure and asthma among children, a random sample of households in Detroit, Michigan is recruited to participate in a study in 2011. Parents are interviewed about the child’s current lower respiratory symptoms, and air samples are taken inside the home on the same day as the interview to measure mold concentration. Calculate the absolute measure of association for this study and interpret it using a complete sentence.

diagram1 Asthma No Asthma
Mold found
In >2 rooms 100 900 1000
Of home
_____________________________________
Mold found
In 1 room 100 1900 2000
Or less
200 2000
2. To examine whether insurance coverage is associated with discharge to a specialized post-acute care facility (e.g., rehabilitation, skilled nursing, etc.) after a trauma hospitalization, 2960 trauma patients from the National Trauma Databank in 2006 were assessed. The likelihood of discharge to a specialized facility was compared between trauma patients with Medicaid versus other insurance coverage. Calculate the ratio measure of association for this study and interpret it using a complete sentence.

diagram2 Discharge to special No discharge to special
Facility Facility
Medicaid covered 80 1920 2000

Other insurance 80 920 1000
_____________________________________________________________________________________
160 2840
3. A study examines the association between family history of cancer and risk of laryngeal cancer. Laryngeal cancers were identified from a registry between 1992 and 2009 and histologically confirmed. Cancer patients were contacted and asked about laryngeal cancer history in any first-degree relative along with other risk factors. Calculate and interpret the appropriate measure of association.

diagram3 Laryngeal cancer controls
family history
of cancer 65 120 185

No cancer
Family history 20 135 155
85 255

4. A study that found that adult residents of a small town in New York who ate fish from a local PCB-contaminated river had a 1.5 times higher incidence rate of liver cancer compared to residents in the same town who did not consume fish from the same source during childhood. Calculate and interpret the appropriate absolute measure of association.

Diagram4 Liver Cancer No liver cancer person-
Years exposure
Ate fish from
River 20 years ago 90 900 11,000
No fish from river
20 years ago 90 1900 19,000
180 2800 30,000

Compose your work using a word processor (or other software as appropriate) and save it frequently to your computer. Be sure to check your work and correct any spelling or grammatical errors before you upload it. When you are ready to submit your work, click “Browse My Computer” and find your file. Once you have located your file, click “Open” and, if successful, the file name will appear under the Attached files heading. Scroll to the bottom of the page and click “Submit.”

Statistical Thinking in Health Care

Case Study 1: Statistical Thinking in Health Care

Read the following case study.

Ben Davis had just completed an intensive course in Statistical Thinking for Business Improvement, which was offered to all employees of a large health maintenance organization. There was no time to celebrate, however, because he was already under a lot of pressure. Ben works as a pharmacist’s assistant in the HMO’s pharmacy, and his manager, Juan de Pacotilla, was about to be fired. Juan’s dismissal appeared to be imminent due to numerous complaints and even a few lawsuits over inaccurate prescriptions. Juan now was asking Ben for his assistance in trying to resolve the problem, preferably yesterday!

“Ben, I really need your help! If I can’t show some major improvement or at least a solid plan by next month, I’m history.”
“I’ll be glad to help, Juan, but what can I do? I’m just a pharmacist’s assistant.”
“I don’t care what your job title is; I think you’re just the person who can get this done. I realize I’ve been too far removed from day-to-day operations in the pharmacy, but you work there every day. You’re in a much better position to find out how to fix the problem. Just tell me what to do, and I’ll do it.”
“But what about the statistical consultant you hired to analyze the data on inaccurate prescriptions?”
“Ben, to be honest, I’m really disappointed with that guy. He has spent two weeks trying to come up with a new modeling approach to predict weekly inaccurate prescriptions. I tried to explain to him that I don’t want to predict the mistakes, I want to eliminate them! I don’t think I got through, however, because he said we need a month of additional data to verify the model, and then he can apply a new method he just read about in a journal to identify ‘change points in the time series,’ whatever that means. But get this, he will only identify the change points and send me a list; he says it’s my job to figure out what they mean and how to respond. I don’t know much about statistics — the only thing I remember from my course in college is that it was the worst course I ever took– but I’m becoming convinced that it actually doesn’t have much to offer in solving real problems. You’ve just gone through this statistical thinking course, though, so maybe you can see something I can’t. To me, statistical thinking sounds like an oxymoron. I realize it’s a long shot, but I was hoping you could use this as the project you need to officially complete the course.”

“I see your point, Juan. I felt the same way, too. This course was interesting, though, because it didn’t focus on crunching numbers. I have some ideas about how we can approach making improvements in prescription accuracy, and I think this would be a great project. We may not be able to solve it ourselves, however. As you know, there is a lot of finger-pointing going on; the pharmacists blame sloppy handwriting and incomplete instructions from doctors for the problem; doctors blame pharmacy assistants like me who actually do most of the computer entry of the prescriptions, claiming that we are incompetent; and the assistants tend to blame the pharmacists for assuming too much about our knowledge of medical terminology, brand names, known drug interactions, and so on.”
“It sounds like there’s no hope, Ben!”

“I wouldn’t say that at all, Juan. It’s just that there may be no quick fix we can do by ourselves in the pharmacy. Let me explain how I’m thinking about this and how I would propose attacking the problem using what I just learned in the statistical thinking course.”

Source: G. C. Britz, D. W. Emerling, L. B. Hare, R. W. Hoerl, & J. E. Shade. “How to Teach Others to Apply Statistical Thinking.” Quality Progress (June 1997): 67–80.

Assuming the role of Ben Davis, write a three to four (3-4) page paper in which you apply the approach discussed in the textbook to this problem. You’ll have to make some assumptions about the processes used by the HMO pharmacy. Also, please use the Internet to research articles on common problems or errors that pharmacies face. Your paper should address the following points:

1.Develop a process map about the prescription filling process for HMO’s pharmacy, in which you specify the key problems that the HMO’s pharmacy might be experiencing. Next, use the supplier, input, process steps, output, and customer (SIPOC) model to analyze the HMO pharmacy’s business process.
2.Analyze the process map and SIPOC model to identify possible main root causes of the problems. Next, categorize whether the main root causes of the problem are special causes or common causes. Provide a rationale for your response.
3.Suggest the main tools that you would use and the data that you would collect in order to analyze the business process and correct the problem. Justify your response.
4.Propose one (1) solution to the HMO pharmacy’s on-going problem(s) and propose one (1) strategy to measure the aforementioned solution. Provide a rationale for your response.
5.Use at least two (2) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

•Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
•Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.
The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

•Describe how organizations use statistical thinking to be more competitive.
•Apply the basic principles of statistical thinking to business processes.
•Apply the SIPOC model to identify OFIs in business processes.
•Use technology and information resources to research issues in business process improvement.
•Write clearly and concisely about business process improvement using proper writing mechanics.

Case Study 1: Statistical Thinking in Health Care

Read the following case study.

Ben Davis had just completed an intensive course in Statistical Thinking for Business Improvement, which was offered to all employees of a large health maintenance organization. There was no time to celebrate, however, because he was already under a lot of pressure. Ben works as a pharmacist’s assistant in the HMO’s pharmacy, and his manager, Juan de Pacotilla, was about to be fired. Juan’s dismissal appeared to be imminent due to numerous complaints and even a few lawsuits over inaccurate prescriptions. Juan now was asking Ben for his assistance in trying to resolve the problem, preferably yesterday!

“Ben, I really need your help! If I can’t show some major improvement or at least a solid plan by next month, I’m history.”
“I’ll be glad to help, Juan, but what can I do? I’m just a pharmacist’s assistant.”
“I don’t care what your job title is; I think you’re just the person who can get this done. I realize I’ve been too far removed from day-to-day operations in the pharmacy, but you work there every day. You’re in a much better position to find out how to fix the problem. Just tell me what to do, and I’ll do it.”
“But what about the statistical consultant you hired to analyze the data on inaccurate prescriptions?”
“Ben, to be honest, I’m really disappointed with that guy. He has spent two weeks trying to come up with a new modeling approach to predict weekly inaccurate prescriptions. I tried to explain to him that I don’t want to predict the mistakes, I want to eliminate them! I don’t think I got through, however, because he said we need a month of additional data to verify the model, and then he can apply a new method he just read about in a journal to identify ‘change points in the time series,’ whatever that means. But get this, he will only identify the change points and send me a list; he says it’s my job to figure out what they mean and how to respond. I don’t know much about statistics — the only thing I remember from my course in college is that it was the worst course I ever took– but I’m becoming convinced that it actually doesn’t have much to offer in solving real problems. You’ve just gone through this statistical thinking course, though, so maybe you can see something I can’t. To me, statistical thinking sounds like an oxymoron. I realize it’s a long shot, but I was hoping you could use this as the project you need to officially complete the course.”

“I see your point, Juan. I felt the same way, too. This course was interesting, though, because it didn’t focus on crunching numbers. I have some ideas about how we can approach making improvements in prescription accuracy, and I think this would be a great project. We may not be able to solve it ourselves, however. As you know, there is a lot of finger-pointing going on; the pharmacists blame sloppy handwriting and incomplete instructions from doctors for the problem; doctors blame pharmacy assistants like me who actually do most of the computer entry of the prescriptions, claiming that we are incompetent; and the assistants tend to blame the pharmacists for assuming too much about our knowledge of medical terminology, brand names, known drug interactions, and so on.”
“It sounds like there’s no hope, Ben!”

“I wouldn’t say that at all, Juan. It’s just that there may be no quick fix we can do by ourselves in the pharmacy. Let me explain how I’m thinking about this and how I would propose attacking the problem using what I just learned in the statistical thinking course.”

Source: G. C. Britz, D. W. Emerling, L. B. Hare, R. W. Hoerl, & J. E. Shade. “How to Teach Others to Apply Statistical Thinking.” Quality Progress (June 1997): 67–80.

Assuming the role of Ben Davis, write a three to four (3-4) page paper in which you apply the approach discussed in the textbook to this problem. You’ll have to make some assumptions about the processes used by the HMO pharmacy. Also, please use the Internet to research articles on common problems or errors that pharmacies face. Your paper should address the following points:

1.Develop a process map about the prescription filling process for HMO’s pharmacy, in which you specify the key problems that the HMO’s pharmacy might be experiencing. Next, use the supplier, input, process steps, output, and customer (SIPOC) model to analyze the HMO pharmacy’s business process.
2.Analyze the process map and SIPOC model to identify possible main root causes of the problems. Next, categorize whether the main root causes of the problem are special causes or common causes. Provide a rationale for your response.
3.Suggest the main tools that you would use and the data that you would collect in order to analyze the business process and correct the problem. Justify your response.
4.Propose one (1) solution to the HMO pharmacy’s on-going problem(s) and propose one (1) strategy to measure the aforementioned solution. Provide a rationale for your response.
5.Use at least two (2) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

•Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
•Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.
The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

•Describe how organizations use statistical thinking to be more competitive.
•Apply the basic principles of statistical thinking to business processes.
•Apply the SIPOC model to identify OFIs in business processes.
•Use technology and information resources to research issues in business process improvement.
•Write clearly and concisely about business process improvement using proper writing mechanics.

Kokubu Food Company.

Kokubu Food Company.

Part 2:

For part II of the assignment, read the required articles and then write a 3-5 page paper answering the Kokubu case study questions. Be sure your discussion demonstrates that you understand the meanings and differences between data, information, and knowledge. In your discussion, give a real-world example of data, knowledge, and information in the context of the Kokubu Food Company.

Kokubu management has asked you to be the company consultant and prepare a management analysis of the business to help assess the firm’s current situation and future plans. To familiarize yourself with Kokubu’s background, you should review the corporate information, functions and business, and social and environmental conservation activities in the website. Particular attention must be given to the functions and business link to appreciate how IT supports Kokubu operations and knowledge management activities within the company.

Review the Kokubu website at http://www.kokubu.co.jp/english/business/ and after finding the answers to the Case questions, prepare a summary in 3-5 pages analyzing the following questions.

What kind of organizational trends are evident in the Kokubu case when we consider the business environment, management, and technology?
Discuss the IT applications to the company operations as discussed in the website.
Why is the company considered to be customer focused?
The CEO said his company “created a culture where people are addicted to data, information, and knowledge.” What does he mean by that, and what are the benefits and drawbacks of such a culture?
As a reminder, you must have at least two outside scholarly references when you write cases.

case study of Janis Jones

Read the case study of Janis Jones (see attachment file) and answer the following questions.

1. Identify the presenting problem in this case.
2. what other possible problems do you suspect?
3. What questions do you have about Janis and her situation?
4. What information would you like to add to the case file so you have a more complete picture of the client?

Provide two referrals you would make to gather additional information. Identify the types of referrals, the purpose of the referrals and the questions you would like answered for both.

Woodside, M. and McClam, T. (2014). Generalist Case Management: A Method of Human Service Delivery