Title: Questions
1Welcome to the MHQP HealthForce MN Quality
Brownbag Room Monthly Noon Brownbag Fourth
Thursday Every Month
August 27th Change The Change
Calendar Skip Valusek PhD, CPHQ HealthEast Direc
tor Clinical Analytics
Questions? Contact Skip Valusek MHQP
Education Chair skipvalusek_at_comcast.net
Slides are posted at http//www.healthforceminn
esota.org/pages/Programs/courses.html
2Register your Attendance
- Hopefully you provided your name organization
when you signed in. - If so
- Just say Hi in the Chat Pod and well
capture your name and organization in the log. - If not
- identify yourself and organization in
the Chat Pod to the - left of your screen.
- If there are more than one attending on your
sign-in, tell us how many by saying Hi (tell us
the number of attendees)
3Poll Who is Attending this Session ?
- Rural / Outstate ?
- Metropolitan area ?
- Organization that has (or serves) both ?
4Poll Who is attending Organization Type ?
- Healthcare system
- Hospital
- Clinic or Clinic System
- Long term care
- Healthplan
- Homecare / Hospice
- A Quality Support Organization
- Other ? (Identify other in Chat Pod)
5Poll How many total participating in your room ?
6Poll What do you hope to gain by participating?
- I am a healthcare quality professional and am
interested in additional education. - I am a healthcare professional interested in
developing quality skills as a core competency. - I am a healthcare professional interested in
learning more about healthcare quality.
7(No Transcript)
8Patient Safety Amidst an Avalanche of Change
NNSDO Leadership Concurrent Session IV July
2008
- Beth LaVelle, PhD, RN, CEN
- Skip Valusek, PhD, CPHQ
HealthEast Care System, St. Paul, MN
No relevant relationships to disclose
Please turn your cell phones pagers to vibrate
9Objectives
At the end of this workshop, the learner will be
able to
- Recognize change fatigue in their environments
- Describe the potential impact of change fatigue
on patient safety - Develop a strategy for limiting negative effects
of change by discussing or championing a Change
Calendar in their facility
10To ensure we are all on the same wavelength
- The only constant is change
- (except from a vending machine)
- Life is change . . . .
- Growth is optional
- It is not necessary to change.
- Survival is not
mandatory. -
Deming
11From a Nursing Perspective Has Changed
CHANGE
- constant
- rapid pace
- huge cognitive
- small steps
- slow pace
- natural breaks
12- Conflicting directions of change
a2
a2
13Psychological stress
- Relationship between person the environment
that is appraised as taxing or exceeding
resources endangering well-being - Change
- Significance
- Frequency
- Volume
stakes
?
power to control outcome
a2
14Overload/Turbulence ? change fatigue
15Change fatigue
- Burnout
- staff
- preceptors
- managers
- leaders
- Emotional exhaustion
- Depersonalization
- ? Personal accomplishments
- Absenteeism
- Think about looking for different job
- Organizational studies dont underestimate the
impact of organizational changes - direct impact on work environment
- contribute to higher rates of dissatisfaction,
burnout, absenteeism
a1
16 system problem
17? Avoiding change fatigue
- Take charge
- We DO have choices
- Balance our day-to-day work must get done
- Balance standardization individualization
- William Ury The Power of a Positive No
- Need slack time
- Know We are not in this alone
- Use Crew Resource Management techniques
18Time
WHEN?
WHO
WHERE
WHAT?
Changes
WHY?
a5
19? Change calendar
20Survey Form
21How often do you encounter multiple, simultaneous
changes at work ?
22Human Factors Patient Safety
Cognitive factors that contribute to error
- Stress fatigue
- Lack of familiarity with the task
- Trying something new under pressure
- Information overload
- Workload multi-tasking
- Doing more with less resources
- Favoring production over safety
- Task saturation
- Task prioritization
Simpson KnoxAdverse Perinatal Outcomes
Recognizing, understanding preventing common
accidents. AWHONN Lifelines, Jun-Jul 2003
23How do you think these changes affect patient
safety? Comments?
Survey
- I think the multiple, frequent changes
affect patient safety in subtle ways. A great
deal of time and mental energy is spent fumbling
through new processes or new equipment and this
takes time and mental focus away from our
patients. When a nurse can work with familiar
systems, documents and equipment she/he can
confidently care for patients. The constant
change in our work environment also creates a
persistent undercurrent of stress and overload -
and a feeling of futility (like getting slammed
by wave after wave when you're just trying to
swim !) I cannot believe this undercurrent of
stress and overload does not have a negative
impact on patient safety and it certainly impacts
our ability to satisfy our patients beyond their
safety needs.
24The Change Calendar
Impact Of Change
Manage the scope velocity of change affecting
those providing patient care
a3
25Change Calendar as a tool to reduce risk
Objectives
- Forecast pro-actively schedule changes that
affect caregivers - Assess the impact of each change
- Purposefully plan how to meet educational needs
- Justify requests to either
- Increase preceptor educator staffing OR
- Delay implementations to prevent change fatigue
to ensure adequate training/education
26The Process
Change Calendar as a tool to reduce risk
- Identify an Executive Sponsor (COO?)
- Identify Categories/Contributors/Input Champions
- Choose a Database Engine (e.g. MS Project?)
- Choose an Implementation approach
- Top Down Requires a really engaged Sponsor
- Bottom Up Will lose the forest for the trees
- Middle Out Engages those who manage the
projects
27If top down doesnt work, try middle out.
- Pick one or two Model Units
- Unit Director
- Clinical Manager
- Clinical Nurse Specialist
- Lead Preceptor
28What are the categories of change?
- Education evaluation of competency
- Policies / Procedures / Guidelines / Order Sets
- Compliance
- Information technology
- Equipment Materials
- Facilities
- Research
- Operational
29How do we assess the impact of change?
- Use the 3 Cs of nursing education to assess
- cognitive impact on a unit/department on any
- given week
- Communication (awareness 10)
- Comprehension (understanding 25-50)
- Competency (new skills cognition 50-100)
a2
30Who maintains the Calendar?
- A committee?
- A department?
-
-
Which department ? (this is an interactive part
of the presentation)
a3
31How do you measure Change Calendar success
. . . or do you ??
- The KISS principle is essential!
- Is it on the Change Calendar ?
- Calendar is being used proactively to schedule
an implementation or pilot. - Impact on staff (also a research opportunity)
32Status of Change Calendar in Evolution
- Launched at 1 of 3 system sites
- Initially labeled Pilot
- Better labeled Proof of Concept
- Helpful creating awareness of major competing
projects ensuring they are not simultaneous. - Has not reached state where major efforts on any
given unit on any given week are visible - Still missing flow of nursing education/competency
training information - Another site has named Executive Sponsor and
operational champion - Restructured Calendar format to emphasize units
departments
33Struggles you may encounter
AWARENESS
- Engagement Requires individualized pre-reviews
- Some project owners dont welcome
transparency/visibility of their projects - Often missing changes that are internal to a unit
a3
34Individualized Pre-Reviews
35Struggles you may encounter (contd)
- Determining Which projects make it onto calendar?
- Room Service nutrition
- Replacing lab microbiology system
- new room/unit/department numbering
- (all IT systems, signage)
- Electronic nursing documentation (EHR)
- Mobile portal for MDs
a10
36Struggles you may encounter (contd)
- Determining how long projects stay on the
calendar? - How do we predict time required to reach steady
state, especially considering part-time nurses? - Is it a phased rollout ?
- Mine is always the highest priority mindset
a10
37A Snapshot from St Josephs Change Calendar
38? Assess your present situation
39? Assess your present situation
new CNO much, much more.
40Patient Safety Amidst An Avalanche of Change
Objectives
- 1. To recognize change fatigue in your
environment - 2. To understand the potential impact of change
fatigue on patient safety. - 3. To be able to develop a strategy for limiting
the negative effects of change by discussing or
championing a Change Calendar in your facility.
41References suggested readings
- Beaudan E. Making change last How to get beyond
change fatigue. Ivey Business Journal 2006.
Jan-Feb, 1-7. - Felgen J. I2E2 Leading Lasting change. Creative
Health Care Management 2007. - Kerfoot K. Beyond busyness Creating slack in the
organization. Dermatology Nursing 2007. 19(10),
107-109. - Lundin S, Christensen J, Paul H. Fish Series
Fish! (2000) Hyperion Fish Sticks! (2003)
Hyperion - Patrick K. Burnout in nursing. Australian Journal
of Advanced Nursing 2007. 24(3) 43-48. - Maslach C Jackson, SE (multiple). Three Maslach
Burnout Inventories (MBI) human services,
educators, general survey. www.cpp/detail - Sexton JB, Helmreich RL, et al. The safety
attitudes questionnaire psychometric properties,
benchmarking data, and emerging research. BMC
Health Services Research 2006. 6(44).
www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6963-6-44.
42References suggested readings, cont.
- Shanley C. Management of change for nurses
lessons from the discipline of organizational
studies. Journal of Nursing Management 2007.
538-546. - Spear SJ. Fixing care from the inside, today.
Harvard Business Review 2005.83(9)89-91. - Tracy MF (2007). Powered by insight. Presented at
the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
National Teaching Institute Critical Care
Exposition, Atlanta GA. - Ury W 1991 Getting to Yes Negotiating
Agreement Without Giving In, 2nd Edition with
Roger Fisher Bruce Patton. Penquin Book. 2007
The Power Of A Positive No How To Say No And
Still Get To Yes. Bantam Dell. - Valusek JR. The change calendar A tool to
prevent change fatigue.The Joint Commission
Journal on Quality and Patient Safety 2007.
33(6), 355-360. - Watkins JM Mohr B. Appreciative Inquiry
Change At The Speed Of Imagination.
Jossey-Bass/Pfeiffer 2001. - Wojner A. Outcomes Management Applications to
Clinical Practice. Mosby 2001
43References suggested readings, cont.
- Cohen MH. What you accept is what you teach.
Setting standards for employee accountability.
Creative Healthcare Management, 2007. - Simpson Knox. Adverse Perinatal Outcomes
Recognizing, understanding preventing common
accidents. AWHONN Lifelines, Jun-Jul 2003
44Contacts
- Beth LaVelle, PhD, RN, CEN
- St. Josephs Hospital, St. Paul, MN
- belavelle_at_healtheast.org
- 651-232- 4751 CDT
- Skip Valusek, PhD, CPHQ
- srvalusek_at_healtheast.org
- 651-232-3728 CDT
45Welcome to the MHQP HealthForce MN Quality
Brownbag Room Monthly Noon Brownbag Fourth
Thursday Every Month
September 24th Access Patient Flow Panel
Questions? Contact Skip Valusek MHQP
Education Chair skipvalusek_at_comcast.net
Slides are posted at http//www.healthforceminn
esota.org/pages/Programs/courses.html