Title: Ministry of Health OLIS Adoption Strategy
1Transformational Change Achieving Performance
and Accountability through Behavioural
Change Liz Buller, Senior VP Patient Services,
William Osler Health System Barbara Pitts,
Associate Partner, PricewaterhouseCoopers June
10, 2010
2Agenda
Slide 1
- Background
- Oslers Requirements
- Methodology (Process Management) Governance
- Project Management
- Current State Assessment
- Key Considerations for Implementation Planning
- Tools and Techniques for Improving Accountability
and Performance - Key Success Factors
- Questions
3Background
- William Osler Health System (WOHS) is one the
largest community hospitals in Ontario - Serves one of the fastest growing, culturally
diverse populations in Canada - Amalgamated in 1998, WOHS has three sites two
hospitals providing acute care services, and one
(currently under re-development) that will
provide ambulatory services - New Brampton Civic Site opened Fall 2007
4Background (continued)
- The Health System Plan developed within the
Central West Local Health Integration Network
identified three key areas - Mandate for the Health System A strong
foundation of integrated community-based health
services which is fully supported by an acute
care system. The health service providers
collectively deliver consistent, high-quality
services at the most effective location for the
citizens of the LHIN.
5Background (continued)
- Mandate for Community-based Health Services
Community-based health services are the first
point of contact for residents of the Central
West LHIN. The goal is to provide more services
which support health and well-being closer to
where people live. The health service providers
need to deliver services locally but manage in an
integrated regional model. - Mandate for Acute Care A fully integrated
hospital system which provides a comprehensive
range of services to meet the needs of LHIN
residents and support the community-based service
providers.
6Oslers Requirements
- Osler required transformational change designed
to achieve the following objectives - Improve patient access and flow
- Enhance care management
- Design regional health systems and
- Implement a financial improvement plan for Q4 of
2009-10.
7Oslers Requirements (Continued)
- Identify a consulting firm with whom partner to
support - Current state assessment
- Detailed design
- Implementation planning and
- Full-scale execution.
- Utilize strong process and project management.
- Provide knowledge transfer and capacity building.
8Methodology to Support Process
- PwCs Health System Integration Methodology
- Five-step methodology that spans the gap from the
awareness of the need to change to developing
innovative solutions for the change to successful
implementation. - A "deliverables based methodology with gated
review points.
9Governance Structure
10Project Management
- Transformation Management Office (TMO) a
project management office established to provide
oversight and guidance across all work streams to
ensure consistency, continuity in applying
standards of best practice and coordination of
change management and communications. - Project Management Tools and Processes An array
of tools and techniques from the HSIM toolkit
were employed by, such as - Standardized Project Charters
- Standardized Status Reports
- Implementation Metrics
11Current State Assessment
- The organization-wide current state assessment
resulted in the creation of 27 performance
improvement projects that included both Quick
Wins and longer term Design and Redesign
projects. - The projects spanned a wide range of focus,
including - The redesign of processes, policies and
procedures and roles and responsibilities to
improve patient access and flow from ER to
discharge - The design of regional health systems for cancer,
seniors care, cardiovascular, mental health
additions, and women children
12Current State Assessment (continued)
- Optimization of perioperative services including
scheduling, OR blocks, turnaround times and CSR - Surfacing and executing financial improvement
initiatives to leverage opportunities for
additional revenue generation or cost savings
across the organization and - The development of business cases for
opportunities with a return on investment which
contributed to the achievement of the goals.
13Key Considerations for Implementation Planning
- What is the magnitude of change for the key
stakeholders? What is the duration of the change? - What are the goals for execution? (i.e., What do
we need to accomplish?) - What are the critical barriers and risks to
successful implementation? How will they be
managed / mitigated? - What resources are required for successful
implementation? (e.g., people IT equipment
space)
14Key Considerations for Implementation Planning
- What indicators will need to be tracked during
transition to ensure the changes are being
adopted? - How are you going to communicate the benefits and
success to the impacted stake holders (e.g.,
patients, staff, physicians, management,
partners)? - How is tracking and monitoring of success during
transition going to be handled efficiently? - How will you use the information tracked during
transition to support any course corrections if
targets are not met?
15Tools and Techniques for Improving Accountability
and Performance Stake Holder Analysis and
Change Strategies
Early Adopters Late Adopters Resistors
list the stake holders here list the stake holders here list the stake holders here
Describe the mitigation strategies to be employed to optimize adoption by this stake holder group Describe any opportunity to leverage this group to influence the opinion of late adopters and resistors Describe the mitigation strategies to be employed to optimize adoption by this stake holder group Describe the mitigation strategies proposed to overcome resistance by this stake holder group
16Tools and Techniques for Improving Accountability
and Performance Implementation Reporting
Framework
Detailed Design (Phase 2a)
Implementation Planning (Phase 2b)
Phase 3 Implementation (Phase 3)
Sustainability
- No degradation of performance improvement
- Active responses to evolving changes in internal
and external environment (continuous improvement - Transition indicators
- Outcome indicators
- Permanent measurement systems in place for
ongoing monitoring - Transition indicators trending and exception
reporting - Senior Leadership dashboard
- Launch and execution
- Monitoring and reporting of performance
improvements - Adjustments based on feedback (primarily metrics)
- Transition indicators that reflect demonstration
of real improvement (i.e. outputs of change) - Temporary measurement systems in place
- Leverage existing systems where possible (via
Fin, DSS) - Transition reporting to SC via ACTION project
Office - SC presentations
Focus
- Design and development
- Alignment to project objectives
- Engagement of leadership and stake holders
- Progress and achievements of key milestones,
deliverables in Phase 2 - Project management updates at project meetings
(core extended PM) - Status Reports
- SC presentations
Metrics
Data Collection
Reporting
17Tools and Techniques for Improving Accountability
and Performance ER Quick Win Registration
Triage
- Implementation Start Date January 4, 2010
- Baseline Average Unknown March 13 28
Collection Began - Narrative
- Over time the greet nurse attendance at the greet
desk has been increasing, although last week the
compliance trended down. - This likely happened because we had a higher than
average number of sick calls, and the ER was
short staffed, and the greet nurse desk was not
staffed during breaks. - A suggestion was made to get the resource nurses
to cover breaks when the ER experiences staffing
shortages.
Better/Same as Previous Week
Worse Than Previous Week
18Key Success Factors
- Highly Engaged Leadership
- Executive Sponsors, Steering Committee members,
Project Leaders, Project Managers and Physician
Champions have - led and advocated the importance of the project
to physicians, administration and staff - provided support to the teams when working
through challenges and risks and approving or
proposing innovative solutions.
19Key Success Factors (continued)
- Rigorous Project Management Structures and
Processes - Standardized project management and gated reviews
facilitated - The coordination of project activities in a
consistent manner that adhered to the principles
embedded in transformation (i.e., high quality
patient-centred evidence-based supportive of
the LHIN, etc.) - Consistent monitoring of progress and risk and
- Reporting genuine performance improvement in a
measureable manner and making course corrections
in real time.
20Key Success Factors (continued)
- Knowledge Transfer
- Osler staff and the PwC team worked in a highly
collaborative manner to develop and improve
capacity. - All Project Leaders were Osler management staff
to ensure decisions were made locally and
supported by the PwC project managers. - A number of Osler employees were seconded
specifically to lead work streams in order to
maximize the knowledge transfer during the
engagement so future initiatives can be executed
effectively by the hospital.
21Slide 20
Questions Comments