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New Zealand Institute of Health Management

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Health Care and Informatics Review Online 2004; 1 December, http://hcro.enigma. ... The New Zealand Medical Journal 2004; 117: http://www.nzma.org.nz/journal/117-1198 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Zealand Institute of Health Management


1
New Zealand Institute of Health Management
  • Engaging clinicians
  • Professor Jeffrey Braithwaite
  • Director, Centre for Clinical Governance Research
  • University of New South Wales
  • 28 March 2007

2
1. Is there a problem?
  • Poll question 1
  • Who has worked in or experienced a department or
    unit where clinicians are hard to engage in
    issues outside of direct patient care?
  • Poll question 2
  • Who has worked in or experienced a department or
    unit where clinicians are impossible to engage in
    issues outside of direct patient care?
  • Poll question 3
  • Who works in or knows a department or unit like
    2 now?

3
1. Is there a problem?
  • So theres a bit of a challenge?
  • The electronic sources say so
  • A search of engaging clinicians yielded
  • Google 875,000 websites
  • Google scholar 9,100 articles
  • PubMed 107 citations
  • And NZIHM asked me to talk on this topic
    indicating theres a problem

4
2. What is engagement? Origin 1515
  • 1. the act of engaging or the state of being
    engaged.
  • 2. an appointment or arrangement a business
    engagement.
  • 3. betrothal They announced their engagement.
  • 4. a pledge an obligation or agreement All his
    time seems to be taken up with social
    engagements.
  • 5. employment, or a period or post of employment,
    esp. in the performing arts Her engagement at
    the nightclub will last five weeks.
  • 6. an encounter, conflict, or battle We have had
    two very costly engagements with the enemy this
    week alone.
  • 7. mechanics. the act or state of interlocking.
  • 8. engagements, Commerce. financial obligations.

Source Dictionary.com http//dictionary.referen
ce.com/browse/Engagement
5
3. Why engage clinicians?
  • Every single person is capable, enabled and
    encouraged to work with others to improve the
    service they provide NHS 2007
  • professional energy and engagement needs
    harnessed since one of the key sources of
    intelligence that any health care organisation
    has about the needs of its patient population is
    gathered every day by frontline staff in their
    interactions with both patients and their carers
    NHS 2004

6
4. Characteristics of clinicians
  • Clinicians are
  • Driven by professional values
  • Highly skilled
  • Motivated to achieve excellence
  • Stimulated to achieve professional-level incomes
  • Relatively autonomous
  • Self-esteem and status-directed
  • Tribal

7
4. Characteristics of clinicians
  • Doctors personal traits
  • IQ, individualist
  • Perfectionist
  • Doctors occupational traits
  • Income
  • Mobile then stable
  • Decision-making role
  • Work with risk, uncertainty

8
4. Characteristics of clinicians
  • Nurses personal traits
  • Hands on
  • Caring
  • Nurses occupational traits
  • Becoming
  • More mobile than in the past
  • Caring, compassion meets technology
  • Cognitively collective

9
4. Characteristics of clinicians
  • Allied health staff personal traits
  • Compassionate
  • Empathetic
  • Allied health occupational traits
  • Construed in small-scale units
  • Loyal
  • Less obvious power structures
  • Less certain

10
4. Characteristics of clinicians
Source Braithwaite and Westbrook 2005
11
4. Characteristics of clinicians
Doctors tend to respond here or here, decisively
AHPs tend to respond here
Nurses tend to respond in a block here or here
Source Braithwaite and Westbrook several
studies
12
5. Nature of engagement
  • Involvement
  • Advocacy
  • Consensus
  • Support
  • Working together
  • Inclusive environment
  • Collaborative
  • Winwin
  • Networking
  • Communicate
  • Provide information
  • Use incentives
  • Negotiate
  • Be receptive
  • Mutual benefit
  • Funding mechanisms

Source Braithwaite 2007 - 107 References
content analysed from PubMed
13
5. Nature of engagement
  • Dont intimidate
  • Draw in
  • Meet needs
  • Be clinician-focused
  • Be an expert listener
  • Build rapport
  • Requires interpersonal competence
  • Present data
  • Meet clinical needs
  • Engage in dialogue
  • Integrate people
  • Incorporate
  • Create a central role
  • Provide stimulation
  • Match objectives with tasks

Source Braithwaite 2007 - 107 References
content analysed from PubMed
14
5. Nature of engagement
  • Open environment
  • Transparency
  • Create trust
  • Provide feedback
  • Cope with criticism
  • Lack of time
  • Provide opportunities for participation
  • Opinion leaders
  • Talk about the benefits
  • Understand barriers to participation
  • High opportunity costs for clinicians
  • Valuing direct clinical work over other activities

Source Braithwaite 2007 - 107 References
content analysed from PubMed
15
6. Barriers to engagement
  • Doing own thing
  • Disengagement
  • Time, too busy
  • Differing foci clinical vs organisational
  • Politics of clinicians vs management
  • Misunderstanding
  • Fish out of water
  • Benefits not clear or articulated
  • Strength of evidence
  • Case for change not made
  • Sub-cultures
  • Language

Source Braithwaite 2007 - 107 References
content analysed from PubMed
16
6. Barriers to engagement
Source Braithwaite 1999
17
6. Barriers to engagement
Throwing a rock or a bird? Systems or inanimate
object
?
y x2 b
f ma
Source Paul Plsek based on Richard Dawkins
18
6. Barriers to engagement
Time
Source Bunce 2007
19
7. Teams as a solution
  • Teams in the NHS
  • Having good teams ? effective patient outcomes
    (eg, mortality) better mental health for
    participants increased levels of motivation
    more innovation improved levels of retention and
    recruitment
  • Source Borril et al (2001) who examined 406
    teams, consulted with 7,000 staff in the NHS

20
7. Teams as a solution
  • Teams in aviation and medicine
  • Factors in good team performance provider
    characteristics (eg, personal attributes),
    workplace factors (eg, work organisation) and
    group influences (eg, communication,
    relationships)
  • Barriers to good team performance include
    differences between doctors and nurses, failure
    to admit fatigue or error, reluctance of senior
    staff to accept input junior staff
  • Sources Helmreichs and colleagues many
    studies (Thomas et al 2004 Helmreich 2000
    Sexton et al 2000)

21
7. Teams as a solution
  • Take account of the big five
  • Team leadership
  • Mutual performance monitoring
  • Backup behaviour
  • Adaptability/flexibility
  • Team/collective orientation
  • Source Burke et al 2004

22
7. Teams as a solution
  • But
  • Research evidence and theory says you need to
    take into account all these factors
  • However many people still find that their
    departments are dysfunctional and teams are in
    reality not teams
  • I.e., people arent engaged

23
8. A leadership solution
  • Can leadership help?
  • Edmonson, Bohmer and Pisano (2001) studied change
    in 16 cardiac surgery centres in the United
    States
  • Some were more successful at adopting a new
    technique (minimally invasive cardiac surgery,
    MICS) than others
  • What were the characteristics of successful
    leaders?
  • They engaged people

24
8. A leadership solution
  • What successful leadership looked like
  • Step 1 enrolment
  • Select team members
  • Leaders actions
  • Select team members
  • Define roles, responsibilities
  • Set frame for learning
  • Communicate
  • Team members actions
  • Listen
  • Enrol
  • Step 2 preparation
  • Off-line practice session
  • Leaders actions
  • Reinforce learning frame
  • Lead practice session
  • Create psychological safety via discourse
  • Team members actions
  • Participate
  • Observe leader
  • Step 3 trials
  • Trials of a new routine
  • Leaders actions
  • Ongoing signalling including
  • Invite input, acknowledge needs, and dont reject
    new behaviours
  • Team members actions
  • Notice signals
  • Try new behaviours
  • Step 4 reflection
  • Debriefing to learn from trials
  • Leaders actions
  • Review data
  • Initiate discussions
  • Listen
  • Communicate
  • Team members actions
  • Collect, review data
  • Join in discussions

Outcome New routine becomes accepted practice and
established routine in the organis-ation
25
8. A leadership solution
  • What failed leadership looked like
  • Step 1 enrolment
  • Leaders actions
  • Ask people to participate without saying why
  • Set frame of new plug-in technology
  • Team members actions
  • Show up for training
  • Step 2 preparation
  • Leaders actions
  • Dont show up at practice session - view it as a
    team activity disconnected from the surgeons
    execution of new routine
  • Team members actions
  • Participate in practice sessions without leader
  • Note that teamwork is not essential
  • Step 3 trials
  • Leaders actions
  • Ongoing signalling including
  • Take laissez-faire approach,discourage others
    input, reject new behaviours
  • Team members actions
  • Notice signals
  • Re-evaluate new behaviours
  • Hold back
  • Step 4 reflection
  • Leaders actions
  • Data analyzed late in the process for academic
    publishing or departmental requirements, or not
    at all
  • Team members actions
  • Little or no reflection

Outcome New routine fails to take hold in the
organis-ation
26
9. Culture change solution
  • Culture sets of beliefs, ideas, practices and
    behaviours
  • The way we do things around here
  • Our worldview, assumptions, taken-for-granted,
    outlook, norms, values

27
9. Culture change solution
  • The 800 pound gorilla that impairs performance
    and stifles change is culture Pascale et al,
    1997
  • Significant organisational failures and those in
    other systems are culturally determined
  • Think about Enron The Titanic Bristol Royal
    Infirmary NASA 1929 stock market crash

28
9. Culture change solution
Source Braithwaite 1999
29
10. What to do to engage
  • Stress the value of collaborative effort
  • Connect or reconnect people
  • Acknowledge differences in outlook
  • Engender trust, transparency
  • Tolerate dissent
  • Understand that roles are flexible
  • Focus on accountability individual and team

Sources NHS 2004 Braithwaite PubMed summary
2007
30
10. What to do to engage
  • Remember to evaluate
  • Stress the importance but not the primacy of
    leadership
  • Foster professional goodwill
  • Educate
  • Provide support for those who are interested
  • Permit boundary-crossing

Sources NHS 2004 Braithwaite PubMed summary
2007
31
10. What to do to engage
  • Be sensitive to risk but not overwhelmed by it
  • Support peoples progress, and tolerate the
    occasional stumble
  • Influence through resource allocation
  • Harmonise effort, collaboration, sharing
  • Use information to oil the wheels of engagement

Sources NHS 2004 Braithwaite PubMed summary
2007
32
10. What to do to engage
  • Facilitate the development of skills and talents
  • Work with change champions and opinion leaders
  • Align where possible clinical, managerial and
    policy interests
  • Overcome RTC
  • Work on culture change as defined

Sources NHS 2004 Braithwaite PubMed summary
2007
33
10. What to do to engage
Late Majority
Early Majority
34
34
Early adopters
13.5
Laggards
16
Innovators
Create a tipping point
2.5
Low
High
Speed of adoption
Source Rogers Diffusion of Innovation 1995
34
10. What to do to engage
  • Clear advantage compared to current
  • Simplicity of change and implementation
  • Compatible with current system and values
  • Ease of testing before full commitment
  • Observability of the change and its impact
  • Strength of evidence (specific to healthcare -
    Plsek et al)

Sources Rogers Diffusion of Innovation 1995
Bunce NHS 2007
35
10. What to do to engage
  • Tips
  • No substitute for face to face discussions
  • Early meeting to discuss proposed projects
  • Clear structure to the project
  • Time-line for actions and achievements
  • Action plans and who to implement
  • Celebrate success
  • Plan sustainability of changes early in project
  • Communication, communication, communication

Source Bunce NHS 2007
36
11. Final advice
  • Keep it all in proportion

37
12. Useful documents
  • National Health Service. Engaging clinicians.
    London NHS, 2005.
  • National Health Service. Making a difference
    engaging clinicians in PCTs. London NHS
    Modernisation Agency and NHS Alliance, 2004.

38
13. Useful references
  • Braithwaite J. PubMed articles on engaging
    clinicians. Sydney Centre for Clinical
    Governance Research, 2007
  • Braithwaite J, Westbrook, MT. Rethinking clinical
    organisational structures an attitude survey of
    doctors, nurses and allied health staff in
    clinical directorates. Journal of Health Services
    Research and Policy 2005 101 10-17.
  • Perkins R. Leading health organisations in New
    Zealand Parts 1 and 2. Health Care and
    Informatics Review Online 2004 1 December,
    http//hcro.enigma.co.nz/website/index.cfm?fuseact
    ionarchiveissueissueid54
  • Barnett P, Malcolm L, Wright L, Hendry C.
    Professional leadership and organisational
    change progress towards developing a quality
    culture in New Zealands health system. The New
    Zealand Medical Journal 2004 117
    http//www.nzma.org.nz/journal/117-1198/

39
14. Useful websites
  • NHS Modernisation Agency http//www.wise.nhs.uk/
    cmsWISE/ServiceThemes/acuteservices/engaging/clin
    icians.htm
  • The Health Foundation http//www.health.org.uk/o
    urawards/clinicians/
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