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Clinical Redesign, Modernisation and Practice Development : A Synergistic Relationship

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Title: Clinical Redesign, Modernisation and Practice Development : A Synergistic Relationship


1
Clinical Redesign, Modernisation and Practice
Development A Synergistic Relationship?
  • Brendan McCormack,
  • Professor of Nursing Research, University of
    Ulster

2
Healthcare Reform Agencies
3
Modernisation Integration
  • horizontal integration - strategies linking
    similar levels of care (e.g. overcoming
    professional and departmental boundaries)
  • vertical integration - strategies linking
    different levels of care (e.g. primary,
    secondary, tertiary)
  • continuity of care - strategies that highlighting
    the patients experience (e.g. models of care)
  • integrated care - a broad term encompassing the
    bringing together of different aspects of
    services (e.g. technological, managerial and
    economic integration).

4
Systems elements structures, processes, patterns
5
Patterns are often ignored or go unchallenged
despite changes to structures and processes
(Plsek 2001 Ill 2005). This is because patterns
are associated with distinctive behavioural norms
that manifest specific values, beliefs and
assumptions within a workplace. These aspects
together by definition are termed culture
(Schein, 2004) where implicit importance is
placed on how things are done and what counts as
important. To bring about fundamental change in
complex systems requires the recognition of
patterns that drive thinking and behaviour (Plsek
2001).
6
Micro-systems
  • are small functional, front-line units that
    provide most healthcare to most people. They are
    the essential building blocks of the health
    system. They are the place where patients and
    healthcare staff meet.
  • (Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical School)

7
  • Ultimately the outcomes of the macro-systems
    can be no better than the micro-systems of which
    it is composed
  • (Nelson et al 2002474)

8
  • the transformation of practice understands
    that changing practices is not just a matter of
    changing the ideas of individual practitioners
    alone, but also discovering, analysing and
    transforming the social, cultural, discursive and
    material conditions under which their practice
    occurs (Kemmis, 2005)

9
The Disconnected Disorder (adapted from
Arabena 2006)
  • The disconnection between those engaged in
    developmental processes fuelled by an
    insensitivity to those who are most intimate with
    it

10
Dignity and Work (after Marx)
  • Dignity is lost when workers are alienated from
  • the products of their labour, that is they no
    longer determine what is to be made or how it is
    to be used
  • the process of work, someone else controls the
    pace, techniques and processes of work and
    workers become emotionally separated from their
    work
  • the ability to be creative, when workers capacity
    for self directed creativity is denied
  • when workers are alienated from others, when
    group interactions are dictated by rigid
    hierarchies which determine who can relate to
    whom.

11
Dignity and the Patient
  • I have been referred to so many people here, a
    Mr an orthopaedic surgeon, and my own
    consultant Mr looks after all my other things.
    I am now apparently referred to a Mr whoever he
    is, I dont know where I am in this place. I
    dont know who is going to treat who or what
  • (Quote from a patient participating in a study
    of whole systems working, McCormack et al, 2005)

12
Human Flourishing
  • Focuses on maximising the potential for
    individuals to achieve their potential for growth
    and development
  • Thus human flourishing is seen as both the end
    and the means of practice, practice development
    and practitioner research

(adapted from McCormack Titchen, 2006)
13
Person-centred care is achieved through
  • Developing person-centred care systems
  • Developing person-centred cultures
  • Developing practitioners to
  • work collectively towards a person-centred
    approach
  • learn in and from practice
  • use evidence in and from practice including the
    patients' experience
  • systematically evaluate practice change and
    innovation
  • Release their creativity to address issues in the
    workplace

14
What does Practice development have to Offer this
Agenda?
Practice Development gave us the permission or
license to do what we had always wanted to do.
  • PD does what it is often hard to do in large
    organisations and in large systems
  • it works with individuals and teams
  • it helps engage individuals with the larger
    vision, a shared vision
  • it helps to create links with their own
    aspirations
  • it has the potential to translate complex
    organisational and strategic agendas into
    practice reality
  • PD by working in respectful ways can help move
    health care staff and patients to a better
    alignment of what constitutes person centred
    care.
  • it moves the energy that would otherwise have
    been expended in conflictual agendas and
    resistance towards shared agendas.
  • it facilitates the system as a whole to re-engage
    with the untapped potential lying within the
    healthcare workforce and their patients.

(McCormack, Manley Walsh, in press)
15
  • Practice development is a continuous process of
    developing person-centred cultures. It is enabled
    by facilitators who authentically engage with
    individuals and teams to blend personal qualities
    and creative imagination with practice skills and
    practice wisdom. The learning that occurs brings
    about transformations of individual and team
    practices. This is sustained by embedding both
    processes and outcomes in corporate strategy.
  • (McCormack, Manley Wilson, in press)

16
  • Practice development utilizes a number of key
    steps in systematically developing
    person-centered cultures, including
  • Agreed ethical processes
  • Stakeholder analysis and agreed ways of engaging
    stakeholders
  • Person-centredness
  • Values clarification
  • Developing a shared vision
  • Workplace culture analysis
  • Collaboration and participation
  • Developing shared ownership
  • Reflective learning
  • Methods to facilitate critical reflection (e.g.
    action learning)
  • High challenge and high support
  • Feedback
  • Knowledge use
  • Process and outcome evaluation
  • Facilitation of transitions
  • Giving space for ideas to flourish
  • Dissemination of learning
  • Rewarding success

Changing practices, team processes and workplace
cultures and enabling human flourishing
17
A Model of Active Learning
(Fink, 1999)
18
To achieve its purpose, active learning must take
on many shapes or guises, including talking,
writing, reading, discussing, debating, music,
walking, acting, role-playing, games, journaling,
interviewing, making displays and posters,
building sculptures, many forms of creativity,
imagining, visioning, theatre etc
19
What is Person-centeredness?
  • Person-centeredness is an approach to
  • practice established through the formation and
    fostering of therapeutic relationships between
    all care providers, care receivers and others
    significant to them in their lives.
  • It is underpinned by values of respect for
    persons, individual right to self determination,
    mutual respect and understanding. It is enabled
    by cultures of empowerment that foster continuous
    approaches to practice development
  • (adapted from RoI Older Persons National PD
    Programme Facilitation Team)

20
The Person- Centered Nursing Theoretical Framework
21
  • Professionally competent
  • Developed interpersonal
  • skills
  • Commitment to the job
  • Clarity of beliefs and
  • values
  • Knowing self

22
  • Appropriate skill mix
  • Shared decision
  • making systems
  • Effective staff
  • relationships
  • Supportive
  • organisational
  • systems
  • Power sharing
  • Potential for
  • innovation and risk
  • taking
  • Professionally competent
  • Developed interpersonal
  • skills
  • Commitment to the job
  • Clarity of beliefs and
  • values
  • Knowing self

23
  • Appropriate skill mix
  • Shared decision
  • making systems
  • Effective staff
  • relationships
  • Supportive
  • organisational
  • systems
  • Power sharing
  • Potential for
  • innovation and risk
  • taking
  • Professionally competent
  • Developed interpersonal
  • skills
  • Commitment to the job
  • Clarity of beliefs and
  • values
  • Knowing self
  • Working with patients
  • beliefs and values
  • Engagement
  • Sharing decision making
  • Having sympathetic
  • presence
  • Providing for physical
  • needs

24
  • Appropriate skill mix
  • Shared decision
  • making systems
  • Effective staff
  • relationships
  • Supportive
  • organisational
  • systems
  • Power sharing
  • Potential for
  • innovation and risk
  • taking
  • Professionally competent
  • Developed interpersonal
  • skills
  • Commitment to the job
  • Clarity of beliefs and
  • values
  • Knowing self
  • Working with patients
  • beliefs and values
  • Engagement
  • Sharing decision making
  • Having sympathetic
  • presence
  • Providing for physical
  • needs
  • Satisfaction with
  • Care
  • Involvement with
  • Care
  • Feeling of Well-
  • Being
  • Creating a therapeutic
  • Culture

25
The Person- Centered Nursing Theoretical Framework
26
A realist synthesis of Evidence Relating to
Practice Development
  • A study for NHS Education NHS Quality
    Improvement Scotland http////www.nhshealthqualit
    y.org/nhsqis/qis
  • Professor Brendan McCormack University of
    Ulster/Royal Hospitals Trust, Belfast
  • Belinda Dewar - Queen Margaret University
    College, Edinburgh
  • Jayne Wright, Research Associate, University of
    Ulster
  • Dr Gill Harvey Manchester Business School,
    University of Manchester
  • Robert Garbett University of Ulster/Royal
    Hospitals Trust, Belfast

27
Outcomes from PD
  • Implementation of patient care knowledge
    utilisation projects
  • Development of research knowledge and skills of
    participating staff
  • Development of facilitation skills among staff
  • Development of new services
  • Increased effectiveness of existing services or
    expansion of more effective services
  • Changing workplace cultures to ones that are more
    person-centred
  • Developing learning cultures
  • Increased empowerment of staff
  • Role clarity and shared understanding of role
    contributions
  • Development of greater team capacity
  • Development of frameworks to guide ongoing
    development (e.g. competency framework
    integrated care pathway)

28
Issues to Consider
  • Clarity about desired outcomes
  • Strategic embedding
  • Managers understanding
  • Required expertise
  • Service-user engagement
  • Relationship between service and HEIs
  • Integration of learning approaches
  • Methodological development
  • Outcomes evaluation PRAXIS framework
  • Costing models
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