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Learn how successful quality improvement teams address key questions, practice teamwork exercises, and apply the PDSA learning cycle for continuous improvement in healthcare settings. Discover the behaviors and habits of high-value healthcare organizations and the value of learning from mistakes to enhance patient care.
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Characteristics of Successful QI Teams Mirek Skrypak Associate Director for Quality and Development @MirekSkr @HQIP
Safe Timely Efficient Equitable Effective Patient-centered Teams working on quality improvement address the following: http://www.nap.edu/books/0309072808/html/ @MirekSkr @HQIP
Simplicity X Y Patient sees doctor Healthy and productive member of the community @MirekSkr @HQIP
Complexity @MirekSkr @HQIP
The NHS 133 People to take care of the patient The Patient @MirekSkr @HQIP
Complex systems @MirekSkr @HQIP
Some key questions to ask as a team… Do we know how good we are? Do we know where we stand relative to the best? Over time, where are the gaps in our practice that indicate a need for change (i.e. improvement)? In our efforts to improve, what’s working? Do we know/understand where variation exists in our organisation? @MirekSkr @HQIP
Don’t get lost in improvement approaches @MirekSkr @HQIP
Break out Exercise • Get into groups of 5,6,7,8: • Assign a time keeper/ball drop counter • Assign a number to each of the other people at your table, starting with the number 1 and continuing until you run out of people @MirekSkr @HQIP
Break out Exercise • Your current process involves tossing the tennis ball (provided) from person to person, following the sequence provided on the next slide • Practice your process one time • Time keeper please: • Time how long the team takes to complete the process (in seconds) • The number of times they drop the tennis ball @MirekSkr @HQIP
Exercise Sequence 8 people 7 people 5 people 1 1 1 1 4 4 3 4 7 5 8 6 3 3 2 3 4 7 5 6 1 2 5 2 5 1 2 6 1 1 @MirekSkr @HQIP 6 people
Time? Drops? @MirekSkr @HQIP
Break out Exercise • Team Aim: We aim to reduce the time taken for every person to touch the ball in sequence. • We also aim to reduce our ball drops • Rules: • The initial sequence as provided must be adhered to • You may only test one change idea at a time • Record the time and ball drops after each change @MirekSkr @HQIP
Exercise Sequence 8 people 7 people 5 people 1 1 1 1 4 4 3 4 7 5 8 6 3 3 2 3 4 7 5 6 1 2 5 2 5 1 2 6 1 1 @MirekSkr @HQIP 6 people
How did you get on ?Fastest Time ? Breakthrough Changes? @MirekSkr @HQIP
PDSA Learning Cycle “A goal without a plan is just a wish” “It’s not the plan that’s important, it’s the planning.” Antoine de Saint-Exupery Dr. Graeme Edwards Langley et. al @MirekSkr @HQIP
Why are we measuring? @MirekSkr @HQIP
A personal view from John Welch clinical lead (sepsis) regional QI collaborative • Clinicians and patients to set the agenda • Clarity, simplicity; ambition with realism • Exemplars, information, feedback (“how we’re doing”) that feels current and relevant at the local level • Do-ers as well as “leaders” - and credible leaders who get their hands dirty • Robust critique - allowing doubters to voice their concerns and to shape what’s done; and change if new evidence or new information emerges • Recognition that sometimes a place or team or time just isn’t right @MirekSkr @HQIP
Model at least these 5 behaviours by…Santana et al 2011 J Hosp Med, Behaviors of Successful Interdisciplinary Hospital Quality Improvement Teams • motivating involved hospital staff toward a shared goal • creating opportunities for learning and problem-solving • addressing the impact of changes to care processes on staff • protecting the integrity of the new care processes • representing each involved clinical discipline effectively. @MirekSkr @HQIP
The Four Habits of High-Value Health Care Organizations NEJM 2011 Bhomer Specification and planning Infrastructure design Measurement and oversight Self-study “Learn from the patient of today, to improve the care for the patient of tomorrow” • Learn from mistakes • Be creative • Capitalise on User Experience and Feedback (including your own team members) @MirekSkr @HQIP
The Value of “Failed” Tests “I did not fail one thousand times; I found one thousand ways how not to make a light bulb.” Thomas Edison 26 @MirekSkr @HQIP
Learning from mistakes to increase P.A.C.E of QI • Probe • ‘Doctor, what other options are you considering if we can’t get the tube in’ • Alert • ‘Doctor, O2 is at 40% and still dropping, the tube not going in, what about a tracheostomy kit?’ • Challenge • ‘Doctor, we need to conduct a tracheostomy now or we will loose the patient’ • Emergency • ‘I’m alerting the resuscitation team to do the tracheostomy’ @MirekSkr @HQIP
"Creativity is seeing what everyone else has seen, and thinking what no one else has thought" ~ Einstein @MirekSkr @HQIP
Design versus user experience and what could happen when you respond to user feedback via @chrisarsenault@MattStibbs @MirekSkr @HQIP
Words of wisdom…. • 1)Control the controllables • 2)Football is like a bank, the more you put in the more you will get out • 3)You are only as good as your last game @MirekSkr @HQIP
THANK YOU Mirek Skrypak Associate Director for Quality and Development mirek.skrypak@hqip.org.uk @MirekSkr