But take a look anyway, if you have an interest in process improvement in hospitals. This is a collection of my best posts on this topic.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

More on fetching and work-arounds

Some colleagues and I had a chance today to spend some time with Steven Spear, from MIT and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, who is an expert on the kind of process improvement program we are trying to carry out at BIDMC. That he had terrific and useful insights was no surprise to those of us who have read some of his work.

Steve also made mention of research carried out by Anita Tucker, from Harvard Business School, in which she spent many hours observing nurses in hospitals. (I did not find this particular study, but here is one that summarizes it.) Her conclusions were consistent with my own observations and the points I made in my staff email back in November -- and many comments I received from our staff after that email. Professor Tucker found that nurses who encounter problems or impediments on the hospital floors generally will invent a quick work-around to solve those problems. This makes sense. First of all, they are really busy and just need to get the problem solved. Secondly, most organizations do not provide a way to call out problems and have them solved in a timely or effective fashion. Unfortunately, this pragmatic approach to problem-solving leaves systemic problems untreated and, indeed, aggravated by an additional layer of work-arounds.

As Steve has written in his studies of Toyota and reviews of other high performance organizations, the common characteristic of these organizations is not in their ability to design perfect and complex production or service delivery systems. Rather, it is their ability to discover great systems. They do this by managing their work flow to encourage people at all levels to call out problems; to "swarm" together to solve those problems; to share this process of discovery with others in the organization so that the solutions are diffused widely; and to cultivate the skills of people throughout the organization to be involved in this kind of constant improvement.

It was heartening to hear this reinforcement for the kind of program we are beginning at our hospital, which was named BIDMC Spirit in our own election campaign. I feel like we are on the right track. Now comes the simple (hah!) part -- doing it. Our first training session was held today. Stay tuned for further developments.

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