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Changing our Service Culture

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Title: Changing our Service Culture


1
Changing our Service Culture
  • Walking in the Footsteps of Giants

2
  • Sociologists, advocates for various causes,
    religious, national and international leaders,
    all have pondered the question of how to change
    attitudes and behavior of groups of people to
    bring about a desired outcome.
  • Several have identified key components of culture
    change Leadership is not reserved to those with
    titles anyone can go first. Sustained culture
    change is not achieved through laws and
    regulations alone, and not through occasional
    feel good cum by ya experiences.

3
  • In The Leadership Challenge, Kouzes and Posner
    also advise a 5 step approach
  • Challenge the presentsearch for opportunities,
    experiment and take risks. Leaders go first.
    They set the example by what they do, not just
    what they say.
  • Inspire a shared visionforge agreement around
    common principles and common ideals.
  • Enable others to actfoster collaboration,
    strengthen others and build trust. We is the
    magic word not I.
  • Model the way to the desired goals, i.e. live
    what you say.
  • Encourage the heart of everyone involved. A
    genuine Thank you is also magical in its effect
    on the heart.

4
Advice from Experts on Culture Change
  • The Institute for Healthcare Improvement also
    identifies 5 steps in culture change with many
    similarities to The Leadership Challenge steps
  • set the direction (mission, vision, and
    strategy),
  • establish the foundationleaders align their
    actions with the shared values,
  • build willcreating trust and a positive
    relationship between the leader and the
    constituents builds the will to join in the
    work,
  • generate ideas/possibilities from every corner of
    the workforce,
  • execute changebuilt on a foundation of
    credibility .

5
Lets Use Plain TalkThe critical elements of
culture change are few
  • WORDSarticulate clearly and repeatedly the
    change you want to see
  • WITNESSmodel the behavior you want and treat
    violations with concern
  • WIDEN THE SEARCHask for suggestions from every
    type of stakeholder
  • WEAVE NEW PRACTICES into the daily life of the
    facility through adequate training and resources
  • WALKInto the unfamiliar all together armed with
    determination and resolve.

6
  • OMH has focused the aim of our change efforts to
    embrace a strong and lasting commitment to
    nonviolent and non-coercive care that understands
    and responds compassionately to the effects of
    trauma in the lives of the persons we treat and
    serve.
  • We aim to be and be perceived as healers and not
    as enforcers.

7
OMH Cultural Change
  • In concrete terms, this means
  • creating environments where individuals feel
    safe, listened to, prized (we do not feel prized
    in dirty and broken environments) and where
    interactions communicate understanding and
    respect. In short, we are about creating
    environments where positive relationships can
    flourish.
  • reducing the use of restraint seclusion and
    other coercive interventions, e.g., point systems
    open to staff manipulation.
  • providing skills training and transition
    opportunities that prepare individuals for
    ordinary lives in the community.
  • training staff in collaboration and the use of
    positive behavioral interventions and supports.

8
Our culture change continues to be a work in
progress because...
  • Culture change is a long term commitment that
    involves everyone embracing and modeling behavior
    that reflects a common mission vision.
  • It is hard work that calls for personal courage
    to assess our particular cultural pathologies
    and stand against them. (C. Lerche, Building
    Peace through Reconciliation).
  • It requires that we reject pessimistic
    inevitability thinking (Kriesberg 1998).

9
History shows that persistent and dedicated
belief in the power of the human brain to adapt
and to create can lead to unimaginable results.
Adapted from Elyn Saks,
professor of law and researcher
at USC
10
A Broader Perspective
  • Consider the almost unimaginable that has been
    accomplished by people committed to change.
  • The Truth and Reconciliation Commission paved the
    way for the reconstruction of society in South
    Africa.
  • The ending of centuries of demonizing and
    hostility between tribes and sects in Africa and
    elsewhere, e.g., the Tutsi Hutu in Rwanda,
    Burundi and the Congo.
  • The Civil Rights and Freedom Movements in the US
    and around the world.

11
Change occurs one heart at a time. There is no
change without personal conversion. This
conversion is a choicea daily, hourly,
minute-by-minute choice. Choosing to act in
conformance with the shared vision is taught by
apprenticeship and drill. Adapted from Stanley
Hauerwas, American ethicist. Duke Law School and
Duke Divinity School
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