Title: Quality Improvement Leadership in Complex Healthcare Organizations
1Quality Improvement Leadership in Complex
Healthcare Organizations
- Dr. Tony Taylor FRCPC, MBA
- VP Medicine, Quality Patient Safety
- Fraser Health Authority
2BC Health Authorities
3BCs largest fastest growing Health Authority
- Services in 22 municipalities, 1.5 M people
- 12 acute care hospitals (2100 beds), 7000
residential beds - Mental health care, public health, home
community care - 22,300 staff, including 8,000 nurses, 3,200
allied health professionals, 9,800 Clinical and
Operational support personnel - 2,300 physicians with privileges in FH hospitals
- 2.15B budget
- Diverse communities and populations
4Our Purpose
- To improve the health of the population
- and the quality of life of the people we
serve.
5Our Values
Respect, caring and trust characterize
our relationships.
6Our Commitments
- To be passionate in our pursuit of quality and
safe health care. - To inspire individual and collective
contribution. - To be focused on outcomes, open to evidence, new
ideas and innovation. - To embrace new partners as teammembers and
collaborators. - To be accountable forensuring the greatest value
isachieved for the greatestnumber of people,
while operatingwithin our available resources.
7Fraser Health A Typical Day
42 babies born 117 kindergarten immunizations 210
hearing evaluations 59 long term care
assessments 1052 ER visits 2000 patients in acute
care beds 400 patients have surgery 236 clients
in Adult Day Programs 577 home care nursing
visits 7660 residents in LTC facilities 660
clients access mental health community
services 22 people die
8What is Quality?
- Accessibility
- Acceptability
- Affordability
- Effectiveness
- Efficiency
- Safety
9Accessibility
- Absence of barriers such as time, space, or
language
10Accessibility
- Responsiveness
- Availability
11Acceptability
- The extent to which subjective experiences
fulfill expectations
12Acceptability
- Satisfaction
- Feedback
- Expectations met
13Affordability
- The financial amount allocated to spend
14Affordability
- Out of pocket costs
- Indirect costs
- Capital costs
- Operating costs
15Effectiveness
- The ability to have ones needs met
16Effectiveness
- Value
- Desirable state
- Clinical outcome
- Clinical effect
17Efficiency
- The ability to produce the desired effect,
product, or output with a minimum of effort,
expense or waste
18Efficiency
- Alignment
- Integrated
- Appropriate
19Safety
- Absence of physical and psychological harm
20Safety
- No harm
- Limited risk
- Security
- Competency
21Patient Care
Patient Care
22Leadership
- The ability to get others to do what they do not
want to and like it - Harry
S. Truman
23A Culture of SafetyWhat does this mean?
- Culture is reflected in behaviors determined by
peoples values and beliefs - Culture is not created by
- policy
- evidence (no matter how compelling!)
- education
- roll-out implementation
24What does it take?
- Influence the culture by hard-wiring the change
into practice - Clearly and relentlessly communicate and model
the behaviors we wish to change - Understand the impact of the desired change on
both people and processes - Build the change into the core business
25Culture Shift
- Must move from a culture of productivity to a
culture of quality and safety - Move from the financial driven agenda to the
clinical driven agenda
26What Do Chief Executives Want?
- The pride and determination of professionals to
- improve the care they give
- Results
- Stories of how improvement has benefited patients
and care providers - Results
- Linking the improvement goals and measures to the
organization's business goals
27Alignment
Once I realized that improvement wasnt a
desirable addition to the way we were doing
business it was our business we really began
to perform. We used it to crack the difficult
operational problems. We used it to attract good
staff. We used it to develop the team. We used it
to build our reputation Ian Winstanley, Chief
Operating Officer, Luton tPCT, Provider Services
28Organizational Transformation
- Potential is recognized
- Interest develops
- Engage front line
- Multiple QI projects
- Start to recognize value to pts
- Where we are now
Leaders explore
Quality Committees
- Quality label goes away
- Where we need to go
Transformation
Jim Reinertsen
29- Senior leaders get to the next level by
- seeing differently
- owning the problem
- aiming high and wide
- taking the plunge
- using leverage
30Aim High Aim Wide
High
Islands of Excellence
Transformation
AIM
Incremental Improvement
Just Good Enough
Low
System Level
Unit Level
BREADTH OF AIM
31Seven Leverage Points for Leaders
- 1. Set measured system-level aims and oversee
their - achievement at the Board level.
- 2. Align aims, measures and strategies in a
leadership - learning system
- 3. Channel attention to system-level aims and
measures - 4. Engage an effective and committed team
- 5. Engage the CFO in achieving the aim
- 6. Engage physicians in achieving the aim
- 7. Build the improvement capability necessary to
achieve - the aim
Seven Leadership Leverage Points Innovation
Series 2008 2nd Edition Institute for Healthcare
Improvement
32How Do We Want To Show Up?
- Need to establish system level aims performance
measures - Create alignment between operations, service
planning, finance quality - Currency of leadership is attention
- Right people on the bus
- Connect quality patient safety with business
performance - Engage physicians health professionals
- All staff must become patient safety officers
337 Deadly Sins Of Change
- Start with a large pilot project
- Find one person to do it ALL
- Be vigilant and work harder
- If it works in the pilot unit DONT change it for
the organization - Appoint the successful team leader as the driver
for change for the entire organization - Look at the deficits on a quarterly basis
- Early on expect marked improvement in hospital
wide outcomes
Roger Resar Carol Haraden IHI
34Key Steps to Integrate Quality Into Complex
Organizations
- Address strategic priorities, culture and
infrastructure - Engage key stakeholders
- Communicate and build awareness
- Establish, oversee communicate system level
aims - Track/measure performance over time
- Support staff, physicians, patients, families
- Align system wide activities and incentives
- Redesign systems and improve reliability
35Growing A Quality Management Culture
- Corporate Commitment (observable)
- Grassroots Involvement (part of the process)
- Quality Management Model (visual anchor)
- Standardized Procedures
- Reporting Feedback (trust)
- Education (technical and human factors)
- Support (consistent messages)
36Parting Thought
- Come to the edge, he said.
- They said, We are afraid.
- Come to the edge, he said.
- They came, he pushed them.
- And they flew.
37Questions