Trondheim municipality, the capital of tech and knowledge in Norway, has always been a leader in innovation. It is home to many Norwegian tech unicorns like Signicat and Kahoot. It is also a beautiful city with colourful warehouses, cobbled streets, a magnificent cathedral and top foodie culture.
As the third-largest municipality in Norway, Trondheim municipality manages 5,000 staff in 200 healthcare units in the healthcare system. Due to the ageing population and the increased demand, one of the top priorities for the municipality is to be more efficient and provide better service quality.
Inefficient and ineffective workforce planning processes always plague healthcare workforce planners. Often, the whole reporting and planning process costs them excessive time because there is a lot of back and forth between departments, navigating different methods of gathering data and delays in dealing with an organisation's hierarchy or bureaucracy. All of these might take several weeks or even months to generate reporting and planning.
However, the planning process is often non-optimal due to the lack of accurate forecasts about the sick-leave absence of staff. Most of the time it is done by rough estimates, repeating past practices and even guesswork. Having poor planning often leads to more people working overtime or more costly part-time staff, resulting in over-budget problems every year. Ineffective planning also triggers more burnout and sick leaves from the staff. That means service is dropping when we need it the most, patients are frustrated, and healthcare workers can do nothing to improve the situation. This results in stress mounting in every area of the organisation, which makes planning even more difficult again.
Given the organisation's size with 5,000 staff to manage, it’s increasingly difficult for Trondheim to break this vicious cycle. Not only did they want to reduce the reliance on temporary workers, but Trondheim leaders also wanted to create a better healthcare environment for their staff and patients.
We provided Trondheim municipality with a comprehensive planning and prediction system in four steps:
Step 1: Collect
Phase 2: Visualise
Phase 3: Build the prediction model
Phase 4: Finalise the updated plan and take action
Phase 5: Communicate the results
That’s what Lars Dyrdahl, CFO of the municipality, has proudly said. ”Better planning also means easier staffing capacity management for planners, as well as less burden on health workers.", added he.
The ambitious leader of the region decided to take a further step to make the best possible use of SynPlan. Not only has he deployed the solution across 200 units within the municipality, but he also restructured the organisation to a central planning approach, which he believes will better take advantage of cutting-edge technology, driving the organisation's efficiency.
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