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About AHCA. A non-profit federation of state affiliates that represent more than 10,000 non-profit and for-profit nursing and assisted living facilities that care for more than 1.5 million elderly and disabled individuals nationally, including veterans. AHCA currently represents 25% of state vetera
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1. Pathway to Performance Excellence
2. About AHCA A non-profit federation of state affiliates that represent more than 10,000 non-profit and for-profit nursing and assisted living facilities that care for more than 1.5 million elderly and disabled individuals nationally, including veterans.
AHCA currently represents 25% of state veterans homes nationwide.
AHCA represents the largest number of not for profit nursing facilities nationwide: over 2,500 facilities.
2nd largest health care PAC at average $1 mil per year.
3. AHCA Support: State Veterans Homes
Legislative and Regulatory Advocacy
In-depth education: Annual convention and other events
National Quality Recognition
4. Legislative and Regulatory Advocacy Over 80 full-time regulatory, legislative, research and other staff based in Washington, D.C.
5. Educational Opportunities Annual Convention:
Over 70 sessions in 13 focus areas, including quality, care practice, workforce and leadership issues
Keynotes: Cal Ripken, Jr. and Dr. Bob Arnot
October 4-7, McCormick place in Chicago
Annual Quality Symposium: February 9-10, 2010 at the Marriott Baltimore Waterfront
Congressional Briefing: June 8-9, 2010
6. Pathway to Performance Excellence
7. Program Objectives
8. The Need and the Opportunity Rising costs cannot be fully offset by increasing revenue
Regulatory compliance does not increase customer satisfaction
Inconsistent performance causes employee dissatisfaction
Traditional management systems are reactive rather than proactive and visionary
Person-centered culture change will not be sustained without systems change
9. There is a Better Way! Act on a vision for what can be
In all situations, lead by example
Let customer expectations define the quality standard
Engage and empower employees
Develop a quality management system to sustain a focus on performance
Develop a structure to fulfill the quality journey
Commit to continuous learning and growth It is a leader’s choice. Do you settle for being pretty good, or do you strive for performance excellence – the place that our customers really expect us to be.
Have everyone stand, put hand on heart, and spin in circle one time
When you fill out evaluation of this session remember that I:
brought you to your feet.
touched your heart
and turned you around
Please don’t be shy about coming up to front with any questions you may have.It is a leader’s choice. Do you settle for being pretty good, or do you strive for performance excellence – the place that our customers really expect us to be.
Have everyone stand, put hand on heart, and spin in circle one time
When you fill out evaluation of this session remember that I:
brought you to your feet.
touched your heart
and turned you around
Please don’t be shy about coming up to front with any questions you may have.
10. Leadership and Culture Change Create a vision for performance excellence
Change to systems thinking:
It’s the system – how organizations approach getting things done
Does caring and compassion trump system thinking?
Systems create behaviors
“My people won’t do what your people do”
85% of “people” problems are systems problems
11. Sharing the Right Vision Grasp your current reality
Commit to innovation
Vision sharing takes time and new system
New language
New tools
Engage all in CQI
12. How Vision Developed New leadership – young or from other professions
Education programs
Pioneer Network, Eden Alternative, etc.
Quality award program and similar models
Never from regulatory change or survey enforcement
13. “Get a Vision” Exercise 3 minutes total
Work individually or as a group from the same facility
Develop a headline that you would like to see about your “community” in 5-7 years
Headline should reflect a measurable result (i.e. Veterans Home staff satisfaction at 96% -- highest in nation)
Write on handout
14. The Philosophical Principles of Quality Management
15. Definition of LTC Quality Is... “The totality of service features and characteristics that meet or exceed customer needs and expectations.”1
Requires the provider to:
Comprehend individual and collective expectations
Provide services and facilities that meet expectations
Achieve a high level of performance and reliability in systems and processes used to deliver services
16. An Essential Measure of Quality Is… Customer Satisfaction
Customers may not always know what is best for them; but they have right to be fully informed, respected, and in control of decisions regarding their service.
17. Customer External Customer: Ultimate user of the service
Internal Customer: Anyone we hand off work to within the organization
18. Customer’s View of Quality (Kano)
19. Customer: Realization & Challenges We care a lot, but then assume we know what is best
Learn to differentiate key customer groups
Empower staff to respond
Recognize every encounter as a quality moment for the customer
20. Remove “Blame” from the System Get the right people on the bus
Believe that everyone wants to do a good job and have fulfillment from their work
21. Empowerment Parameters and Empowerment
22. “Most Important” Exercise 2 minutes total
Meet with someone next to you
Identify the three most important individuals or groups of employees
23. The Managers Gallup research: People leave managers, not organization
24. Managers Need Development Basic management skills
Communication styles
Conflict resolution
Performance evaluation
Coaching
Team meeting skills, idea generating tools, consensus building tools, process management, improvement tools
25. Systems View of Quality
26. Cost of Quality Prevention Cost - Activities designed to prevent poor quality
Appraisal/Inspection Cost - Assessing conformance to a standard
Failure Cost - Correcting non-conformance to a customer’s requirement
Cost increases as problem gets closer to customer
27. Does Inspection Work?
28. Classifying Work Value-Added Work - External customer sees benefit
Required Work - Needed to keep organization operating
Rework - Something was not done properly the first time
Wasted Work - Not required and no value
No Work - Authorized leave/waiting time
29. Do We See the Opportunity? Waste and Rework Cost
Number of full-time equivalent employees 100
Average annual hours worked by each employee 1,950
Total hours worked annually
Estimated rate of waste and rework (20%) .2
Total waste and rework hours
Average hourly pay rate (including benefits) $12.00
Total cost of waste and rework
30. Process and System Process - Interrelated work activities producing a specific outcome
System - A combination of related processes
Process characteristics:
Can be divided into a series of tasks
Tasks can be put into order
Performance can be measured
Need standardized process
31. Variation Two Basic Kinds of Variation:
Common Cause Variation:
predictable and inherent in all processes
Special Cause Variation:
not predictable;
often unsatisfactory;
assignable to a cause – should be investigated
32. Example of Process Variation Sample food temperatures of meal entrees over a 10 day period from two facilities
Average is the same…are both processes performing the same?
33. Organize for Quality
34. Process Management Cycle
35. Selecting a Process to Improve
36. Keep Score that Matters Performance is everything
Efforts will earn you sympathy
Compassion doesn’t cover up poor results
If not getting results, change something
Know key success factors, then
Learning to measure quality is not easy
37. Principles of Measurement Measure the process, not the person
Measure to improve, not to blame
Keep simple, understandable, believable, accurate, and useful
Measure performance against a customer-focused standard
Measure the key process indicators
Make comparisons meaningful (best, not average)
38. Is Alarm Disconnected?
39. The Tools of Quality Management
40. Nature of Problems Problem: Any situation/issue that separates you from your mission, vision, and goals
Two primary categories:
Strategic problems - organizational performance gaps
Process problems - work process failures
Responsibility for problems:
Management responsible for all strategic problems and all process problems if:
process handed down or “tweaked” by management
employees are not empowered to correct Poor process results can come from strategic problems (poor allocation of resources, inadequate supplies, etc.)
Poor process results may contribute to achieving strategic goals
Teams take 5 minutes to read and discuss briefly each example (1-2 and 1-3)
Poor process results can come from strategic problems (poor allocation of resources, inadequate supplies, etc.)
Poor process results may contribute to achieving strategic goals
Teams take 5 minutes to read and discuss briefly each example (1-2 and 1-3)
41. Key Root Cause Concepts
Ask “why” rather than “who”
Ask “why” at least five times
Investigate the facts Why not Who - essential to removing blame from organization’s culture and creating environment where employees contribute to problem solving.
Why X 5 - Ask in sequence, like pealing an onion. Keep asking why until you get to the root cause. Drives us past the temptation to react to symptoms or stop at the apparent cause.
Use only facts from investigations as the basis for root cause analysis. Causes assigned by those involved or affected by the problem may be clouded by emotion or responsive to only one view.Why not Who - essential to removing blame from organization’s culture and creating environment where employees contribute to problem solving.
Why X 5 - Ask in sequence, like pealing an onion. Keep asking why until you get to the root cause. Drives us past the temptation to react to symptoms or stop at the apparent cause.
Use only facts from investigations as the basis for root cause analysis. Causes assigned by those involved or affected by the problem may be clouded by emotion or responsive to only one view.
42. Find the Root Cause Problem 1: Resident and daughter upset that expensive slip purchased for mother had returned from laundry in frayed condition.
Symptoms: - Clothing damaged
- Laundry chemical costs increased
Why: Expensive booster chemical being added to every load
Why: Laundry staff feel it is need to prevent rewash
Why: Laundry supervisor directed
Why: Vendor had not provided training.
Why: Administrator did not include laundry supervisor in
decisions and got too busy to schedule training
Solution: Provide training, develop measurements, empower
43. Develop a CQI Methodology Helps create objectivity
Can be adjusted to fit your QMS
Provides a roadmap to solving problems
Requires discipline to follow steps
Everyone needs to be trained to use it
44. Sample CQI Methodology Identify the process and the customers’ requirements
Collect and analyze process data
Describe the current process (flowchart)
Select opportunities to improve and determine root causes
Develop and implement potential solutions
Hold the gains
45. PDSA Cycle of Improvement
46. Display and Analysis Learn to use the right tools to measure, analyze information and data
47. Models of Quality Management
49. Steps Toward Mature Processes Characterized by activities mostly responsive to immediate needs or problems rather than by processes
Goals are poorly defined
50. Steps Toward Mature Processes Beginning stages of using operating processes with repeatability, evaluation, improvement, and coordination
Strategy and quantitative goals are being defined
51. Steps Toward Mature Processes Systematic processes in place that are regularly evaluated for improvement
Learning from processes shared
Organizational units are coordinated
Processes address well defined strategies and goals
52. Steps Toward Mature Processes Systematic processes in place that are regularly evaluated for change and improvement in collaboration with other affected organizational units
Efficiencies across units sought and achieved through analysis, innovation, and sharing
Processes and measures track progress on key strategic and operational goals
53. AHCA/NCAL Quality Award Step 1 - Commitment: Organizational Profile with mission and demonstration of ability to improve (5 pages; met/not met; no IJ)
Step 2 – Achievement: Address how core values of quality are embraced with good results (18 pages; team of examiners; No IJ and 3 year weighted average above state)
Step 3 – Excellence: Address all of Baldrige criteria with superior results; 55 pages; team of master examiners, No IJ and 3 year weighted average above state)
54. Benefits of Quality Award Model Develops providers’ ability to improve services and internal processes
Peer and public recognition as a quality champion
Examiner feedback identifies strengths and opportunities for improvement
Creates disciplined learning curve
Webinars and other support resources available
55. Benefits of Quality Award Pathway Begins change in thinking
Gives focus to the real customer
Requires continuous learning at all levels
Creates pride/celebration in achievement Requires long term commitment
Creates shift in management style
56. QUESTIONS?
57. Resources Multiple resources for quality improvement listed at AHCA website: http://www.ahcancal.org/quality_improvement/quality_first_initiative/Pages/QF_ToolsResources.aspx
Developing a Quality Management System: The Foundation for Performance Excellence in Long Term Care, Dana, AHCA revised 2008 (Order through AHCA bookstore – listed at above website)
Guidelines for Developing a Quality Management System (Free download) http://www.ahca.org/quality/qf_qms_guidelines.pdf
A Guide to Nursing Facility Performance Measures (also for MR/DD providers) (Free download) http://www.ahca.org/quality/qf_nf_perform_measure.pdf
Good to Great, Collins, HarperCollins, 2001
First, Break All the Rules, Coffman and Buckingham, Simon and Schuster, 1999
Zapp! Empowerment in Healthcare, Bynam, Random House, 1993
The Deming Management Method, Walton, Perigee Books, 1986