Title: Copy%20write%202006%20The%20NewSof%20Group%20
1- Accelerating Clinical Transformation Using
Community Collaboration Tools
Using online communities to accelerate innovation
adoption
Janet Guptill, PresidentKM At Work, Inc.
Neal Sofian, CEO The NewSof Group, Inc.
2Clinical Transformation and Communities of
Practice
- Why do we know that communities are a key
component to accelerating adoption of innovative
practices and technologies? - The science behind individual behavior change
- The basis behind organizational change
- The role that communities and social networks
play in creating change - How do we systematically address accelerating
adoption of innovative practices within hospital
systems? - Lessons learned from the practice of knowledge
management - Examples of hospital systems engaged in
communities of practice to accelerate
transformation - How can Perot Systems, KM At Work, and NewSof
bring a combined solution to its hospital system
clients?
3The Problem
- Medical costs are too high
- Access to medical care is inconsistent
- Patient outcomes are not as good as they should
be - Practices are not optimal and significant
variations persist, even with evidence-based
medical guidelines - Limited means to measure change and progress
- Knowledge remains in unusable silos
4Creating Systemic Change Within Across
Hospital Systems is Critical
- Hospitals need a simple way to learn from their
peers in order to - Share both formal and informal successful
practices, success factors and lessons learned - Access a searchable repository of content, both
internally developed and externally contributed,
to identify evidence-based practices, relevant
research, and context-sensitive knowledge - Identify and extend the reach of expert resources
across member hospitals - Connect with peers for just in time access to
critical new knowledge at the point of care and
the point of need - Create and develop new knowledge regarding
business and care practices - Improve formal and informal communication
regarding common projects, challenges, and
environments.
5Guiding Principles Diffusion of Innovation
- Transferring knowledge is often not enough need
to figure out how to transfer capabilities as
well, through human and technology enabled
support systems - Getting an organization to adapt new ideas
requires a process of re-inventionpeople need to
own the result as their own idea--
- 10 Critical Dynamics of Innovation Diffusion
- Relative Advantage
- Trialability
- Observability
- Communications Channels
- Homophilous Groups
- Pace of Innovation/Reinvention
- Norms, Roles, and Social Networks
- Opinion Leaders
- Compatibility
- Infrastructure
- Source Diffusion of Innovations, Everett Rogers,
1995
Diffusion is the process by which an innovation
is communicated through certain channels over
time among the members of a social system.
6Requirements of Effective System Change
- It Aint Dog Food if the Dog Dont Eat It!
- The program is only as good as the users
willingness to use it - Suction, Not Pressure!
- Develop internal motivations, align incentives
- Information is Not Enough
- If it was we wouldnt be talking today
- Watch What They Do, Not What They Say!
- People often tell you what they wish rather than
how they actually behave. Design interventions
and communication accordingly. - Listen to Your MoM!
- (Microcultures of Meaning) Useful information is
made relevant through people
7Creating Systemic Change
- Focus on the reach and richness of content
(information alone is not enough) - Creating change is both an individual and
organizational process - Think of behavior as a transaction by creating a
health action, medical event, care process, or
business exchange - Create micro-cultures of meaning (to create
context, tacit knowledge, and connectivity) at
both the individual and organizational level - Make contextual information available at the
point of care or need - Incent all parties toward the same outcomes
- Integrate multiple mediums and learning styles
- Focus on what people do, not what they say
- Start with the person, not the risk, issue, or
technology - Build relationships and process, not products and
programs
8The Science
- Recent report human beings are Hardwired to
Connect - We are biologically primed for finding meaning
through attachment to others - Learning is social
- Acting on learning comes from context
- Context comes from the groups of like meaning or
Micro-cultures of Meaning (MoM) - Social Constructionism demonstrates that learning
is always based on the context and language or
stories of the group
9Change drivers in an online community
- Communication pervasive, ongoing, and
multi-modal dont rely on email alone - Context Information is not sufficient to create
change it must be presented with the context to
make it useful - Coaching A suite of tools over time using
multi-modalities and learning styles based on the
degree of complexity or challenge in adopting the
new behavior - Connections Change processes and support
resources need to be customized to the audience -
Build relationships, not products Strive for
continual improvement not a single event - Coin Align incentives of all the stakeholders
and participants - Culture It is part of the core, not peripheral
to a strategy - Personal stories/experience are a
key driver in transmitting this strategy - Start
with the person, not the technology or problem - Create Microcultures of Meaning (MoM)
10Timeline of Behavior Models
- 1927 Pavlov
- 1930s Skinner
- 1935 Lewin Field Theory and Group Process
- 1950s Hockburn, Rosenstock, Health Belief Model
- Kasl, and Cobb
- 1957 Festinger Cognitive Consistency Model
- 1958 Heider Attribution Theory
- 1968 Slovic and Liechtenstein Prospect Theory
- 1972 Sayeki Multiattribute Utility Theory
- 1975 Rogers Protection Motivation Theory
- 1977 Bandura Social learning theory
- 1979 Bettman Consumer Information Processing
- 1980 Green PRECEDE
- 1982 Kotler Social Marketing
- 1982 Leventhal, Zimmerman, Self-regulation
theory - and Guttman
- 1982 Prochaska and Transtheoretical model
- Diclemente
- 1982 Ajzen Theory of Planned Behavior
Celeste Cafiero, Fern Carness, Changing Patient
Behavior
11What is a Microculture of Meaning?
- A community of people with common need or purpose
- Its about connecting people and their knowledge
(explicit implicit) allowing them to
communicate, share common experiences, interpret
information, solve problems (personal, social,
work), collaborate - It assumes the consumer as well as the provider
of information is a valuable source of actionable
knowledge - It can be a virtual support group, a form of
intervention, training extension or a community
of practice - It is a way to build a comfortable place which
facilitates action - intertwining interaction
with contextual and professional information - It is designed to turn information into usable
knowledge - It is far more than a collection of applications
- Interactions match normal community behavior with
the added benefits of the reach and richness that
technology can support
12What is Context?
The beliefs, values, institutions, customs,
labels, laws, divisions of labor, and the like
that make up our social realities are constructed
by members of a culture as they interact with one
another. That is, societies (communities)
construct the lenses through which their
members interpret the world (Freedman, 1996). We
see this as central for empowering effective
change at an individual or organizational level.
13Why is Context Important?
14Creating Community within a Hospital System and
Across Systems
Make networking explicit expected
Create room for reflection re-invention
Knowledge requires connecting people and content
Technology is essential but not sufficient
15Who is Like Me?
- Me can be based on
- Demographics age, sex, ethnicity, marital
status, geography, work type - Circumstances disease/risk state, club
affiliation, employer, job role, a common problem
and/or task, intra/inter mural work team, a
common passion and/or need - Common experience professional affiliation,
alumni/veteran, an academic pursuit, attending
particular events, caring for someone with a
disability, hobby - Me can be any or all of the above and more!
- In a hospital setting Me is often defined in
terms of - Physicians similar specialties, training,
patient mix - Nurses similar care setting, job
responsibilities, roles in care process
improvement - Managers similar functional responsibility,
strategic priority - Patients and Families based on disease,
condition, or medical experience - Facilities demographics of patients, physical
setting, affiliation
16Five Key Elements to Effective Collaboration
- Trust Participants must feel this is a trusted
source of useful knowledge - Relevance The knowledge that is shared applies
directly to them - Urgency The resources shared will help a member
solve a problem quickly - Incentive Collaborating helps advance career
and/or job status or even personal health its
worth it - Reciprocity If I help someone with my knowledge
or experience, someone will help me - These are encouraged and reinforced within a MoM
17Guiding Principles Communities of Practice
Connecting people through online/offline
communities of practice involves building a set
of tools that simplify communication, link people
to content, and provide measurements of value and
impact--
- Key Technology Considerations
- for Supporting Communities of
- Practice
- Presence and visibility
- Rhythm
- Variety of interactions
- Efficiency of involvement
- Short-term value
- Long-term value
- Connection to the world
- Personal identity
- Communal identity
- Belonging and relationships
- Complex boundaries
- Evolution maturation and integration
- Active community-building
- Source Etienne Wenger, Supporting Communities of
Practice, March 2001
Ideas and products and messages and behaviors
spread just like viruses do.-Malcolm Gladwell,
The Tipping Point
18How a MoM Works Online
- Personal Behavior The Online Functionality
- Greeting/Welcome Registration, Personal Web Page
Profile, Welcome email Prepackaged links
(based on profile) of applications, people,
content, resources for new users - Gathering Member Directory, Search, Friends
List Chat - Giving/Referring Discussion and Chat, Resource
Contributions and opinion giving Ratings,
volunteering, and Expression Gallery - Finding Help, Sharing Resources, Ask the
Community Manager, Search - Helping/Instructing Multimedia Stories, Talk
shows, Web logs, Moderated Chats and
Discussion Boards, Web casts - Family/Patient/Peer Web logs. Secure internal
email, External email Updates/notification - Connecting Email, Chat, Discussion Boards,
Group Web logs - Relationship forming Tailored newsletters,
personalization filters and email
notification of relevant knowledge, people,
status within the community, and resources -
- All functionality must be tied together
matching human behavior. The whole is always
greater than the sums of the functional parts
19How a MoM Works Online
- Professional Behavior The Online Functionality
- Greeting/Capabilities Registration, Personal Web
Page Profile, Welcome assessment, team
building, email Prepackaged links (based on
profile) of applications, people, content,
resources for new users - Team Development Member Directory, Search,
Friends List, Chat, Web connection
interface - Collaborating, Co-development Discussion with
Presentation and Chat, Resource Contributions
and Ratings and Expression Gallery - Proven Practices Resources, Ask the Community
Manager, Search - Training, Online seminars Multimedia Stories,
Talk shows, Web logs, Moderated - Professional Development Chats and Discussion
Boards, Web casts - New Research, Innovations Web logs. Secure
internal email, External email
Collaborating notification - Networking, Shop Talk Email, Chat, Discussion
Boards with Presentations, Group Web logs
with controls over access - Grand Rounds, In-service Tailored newsletters,
personalization filters and email -
20Sample Collaboration Tools
- Community building and connectivity tools
- Personal repository for all user saved content,
presentations/education sessions attended and the
members who attended, people of personal
interest, resources, lessons learned, web logs,
identified discussion boards, external weblinks,
etc. - System-generated messages, surveys,
announcements, service offerings, education
schedules, etc. - Community Member web pages, sharing contact
information and member interests and needs, to
support expertise locator function - Ad-hoc communities for attendees of events to
support ongoing discussions - Discussion boards (asynchronous)
- Chats (real-time)
- Email tied to existing email systems, as desired
- Individual and/or group web logs
- Special events capabilities Web casting,
moderated chats, etc.
21Sample Collaboration Tools
- A searchable content repository
- Audio, video, presentation, and support materials
of in-person, teleconference or other educational
programs - Email notification of all new content, resources
and connections as desired - Searchable and rate-able research, resources,
people - Accessible intuitive web pages and directories
for individual users - Easily searchable successful practices, case
studies and lessons learned (can be submitted
and/or retrieved) and attached documents - Resource/document sharing in multiple formats
- Online surveys with ability to deliver tailored
responses and information - Benchmarking capabilities regarding successful
practices, resources and lessons learned
22Knowledge ManagementThree typical uses in
hospitals
- Clinical Decision Support - Incorporating
evidence-based medical knowledge - Performance Improvement - Using scorecards,
analysis methodologies, etc. - Multi-Site Collaboration - Collaborative
knowledge-sharing forums - Build trust
- Facilitate peer-to-peer knowledge transfer
23Collaboration Tools Connecting Resources and
People in Real Time and When There is Time
Who has expertise in this area?
Who else faces similar challenges to mine?
Is anyone else working on problems like mine?
What ideas have been tried and tested?
How can I share what I have learned?
Is there a recommended way to do this?
24Collaboration Tools Lessons Learned from Other
Industries
Saved tens of millions of dollars by creating a
worldwide repository of best practices
1.5 million in savings from two of its
communities of practice
More than 1 billion in documented bottom-line
savings since 1995
Gained 1.5B in annual wafer manufacturing
capacity by sharing best practices
50 million a year in travel cost avoidance and
6 million annually by finding information more
quickly through its KM initiative
Virtual collaboration has become the way
business is conducted - APQC.org
Saved more than 150M in the first year of an
initiative to identify and share marketing best
practices
25Health System Collaboration Examples
Our goal is for CHI to become known as an
innovative organization. That will be our legacy
for the future health care system that CHI
learns to leverage the wisdom of the whole,
efficiently, effectively and humanely. -
Kevin E. Lofton, FACHE, CEO, Catholic Health
Initiatives
Each year, CHRISTUS Health presents Touchstone
Awards to those practices and programs that stand
out as touchstones in exemplifying the Mission
and Values of one of our Directions of Excellence
The Ascension Health Exchange is a collection of
online Communities designed to facilitate sharing
and foster innovation and quality improvement
across Ascension Health to achieve our Calls to
Action
Implementing a One VA information technology framework that supports the integration of information across business lines and provides a source of consistent, reliable, accurate and secure information to veterans and their families, employees and stakeholders.
26 Health System KM Examples
- Catholic Health Initiatives 67 hospitals in 19
states, 67,000 employees, 6 billion annual
operating revenues focus on Knowledge
Communities - Ascension Health 67 hospitals in 20 states,
100,000 employees, 9 billion annual operating
revenues focus on Content Management - Bon Secours Health System Inc. 24 hospitals in
8 states, 27,000 employees, 2.3 billion annual
operating revenues focus on Capability Transfer - CHRISTUS Health 34 hospitals in 5 states and
Mexico, 25,000 employees, 2 billion annual
operating revenues focus on Best Practices
Knowledge Transfer - Veterans Health Administration 23 integrated
service networks, 24 billion in annual operating
expenses focus on Tracking and Metrics - Air Force Medical Service 74 hospitals and
clinics distributed all over the globe, 6.2B
expenses, 39,000 employees focus on technology
and support infrastructure
27What does it take to make change happen in
hospital systems?
28The Process for Effective KM
29The Elements of Comprehensive KM
30Key Components of System-wide KM
System Internal Communities
System External Communities
Directory Knowledge Communities Link to national
strategy SMEs
Health information resources Health risk
assessments Community service mission
System ProfessionalDevelopment
System Knowledge Warehouse
ELearning Leadership Development Mentoring Career
Opportunities Performance Appraisals
Research Proven Practices Facility
Profiles Performance Improvement
System Value Measurement
System Knowledge Cultivation
Knowledge Creation Knowledge Transfer Knowledge
Stewardship Knowledge Coaching
Satisfaction surveys Success stories Activity
metrics
31Knowledge Transfer for Performance Improvement
A Framework
Leadership/ Management
People/Culture
Process
Technology
32Knowledge Management How do we do it?
- 1. Create the infrastructure
- Access Make it easy for people to find the
knowledge they need - Apply Provide the context for making the
knowledge relevant - Accelerate Inoculate the organization with
successes - Build knowledge transfer into organizational
goals - Strategy clearly articulate the expected
outcomes - Design Understand the processes and supporting
technology needed - Operations Integrate into existing staff roles
and responsibilities - 3. Measure the results
- Value connect knowledge sharing to
organizational impact - Metrics Collect satisfaction, process, and
outcome measures - Communicate Share success stories, continually
educate
33Create the Infrastructure to Share Knowledge
- Access Simplify electronic access to critical
knowledge and the people who created it and
become more transparent in sharing hospital
performance indicators - Web-based repositories
- Best practice libraries
- Experiential knowledge sharing
- Search and submit capabilities
- Data and benchmarks
- Guidelines
- Embedded clinical rules alerts
- Community creation toolkits
34Create the Infrastructure to Share Knowledge
- Apply Facilitate peer connections to
- Share explicit (documents) and tacit (experience)
knowledge - Apply general knowledge to specific issues
- Talk about performance improvement
- Build trust to support change
- Innovate
- Blended Learning Email, telephone, face-to-face
- Codified community roles Moderator, recorder,
coordinator - Formalized ways to legitimize participation
- Communication tools
- Connect people with experience and need
- Success stories
35Create the Infrastructure to Share Knowledge
- Accelerate Consider dedicated resources to
accelerate adoption of new knowledge Documents,
educational forums, personalized support - Peer exchange bank
- Project management
- Consulting
- Train-the-trainer
- Pilots
- Packaged documentation
- Awards and incentives
- Ongoing community facilitation
36Build knowledge acceleration into strategic goals
an example
CHIs Desired Future State gives focus to its
preferred future, and describes the key
attributes and imperatives of that future. Five
Core Strategies People, Information, Quality,
Performance, and Growth will focus the
investments in time, money and human energy that
CHI believes will be imperative for staying the
course and sustaining momentum toward its Desired
Future State. CHIs strategic focus will also be
infused with a spirit of Innovation that
fosters and rewards creative thinking and
accelerates learning Knowledge exchange to
ensure CHIs success in a dynamic health care
environment and Partnership with employees,
physicians, local communities, and other
organizations that will advance CHIs efforts in
advocacy, research and development, deployment of
medical/information technologies and the creation
of new models of care.
37Measure the results examples
38Building Communities within/across Hospital
Systems Key Phases
- Strategy clarify objectives, envision the
future - Assessment understand current state, identify
needed changes - Design delineate the components to be built,
create a working prototype, develop
implementation plan, specifications document, and
cost - Build create knowledge creation transfer
processes, develop the tools and templates,
integrate with IT strategy - Operationalize support, customization,
training, documentation, maintenance updates
39Phase 1 - Strategy
- Clarify Objectives WIIFM? For relevant
participants (physicians, nurses, managers,
patients) - Increase customer satisfaction, improve service
quality, reduce response time - Improve outcomes
- Reduce unnecessary variation
- Recruit and retain qualified staff
- Reduce costs, streamline operations, avoid
duplication - Picture Future Success - Describe the future from
all stakeholder perspectives - Identify Oversight team and key contact points to
synchronize on KM aims
40Phase 2 - Assessment
- Current state how well do current tools and
processes work? What needs to be kept,
eliminated, enhanced, created? How do people
currently communicate/share with each other? - Culture what barriers exist regarding sharing
and reuse of knowledge? What are the most
effective means of communication between
individuals and teams? - Processes how do we bake it in to create,
capture, share, and reuse knowledge? - Vitality what are key roles needed to keep the
knowledge current, relevant, and critical? - IT Infrastructure what currently exists and
what are the gaps? How will the databases
integrate? What are internal vs. external access
points? Where do current IT plans fit in?
41Phase 3 - Design
- Feedback identify pilots to model the new
vision and try out the new approaches - Prototype create a working example for
clinicians, managers, patients if appropriate -
to generate detailed user feedback and develop
roll-out plans - Context create links to existing data sets,
tools, and people incorporate external resource
links and resources - Learning refine and create new knowledge
creation transfer processes - Assessment determine how to measure and track
the value - Innovation and New Directions incorporate
planning for the future, including new care
delivery, staffing, and payment models
42Phase 4 - Build
- Create core processes
- Communities of practice roles, rules,
requirements - Knowledge creation transfer techniques
- Integrated clinical information systems
- Data Warehouse and Reporting
- Education and Development
- Develop technology plan
- Develop collaborative spaces internal and
external - Integrate the underlying database model into the
overall IT strategy - Develop and conduct training programs
- Integrate user feedback tracking and value
metrics reporting - Modify processes, tools, and reporting based on
how people actually use them - Develop operations plan
- Knowledge community roles, rules, support
- Content management roles, rules, support
- Professional development program
- Knowledge cultivation program
- Customer relationship management programs
- Communications plan
43Phase 5 - Operationalize
- Identify recruit key opinion leaders/magnets to
participation and leadership - Ongoing coaching of knowledge community leaders,
content librarians, and technology stewards - Ongoing execution of knowledge creation
transfer processes - Ongoing training and adoption support
- Ongoing tool development, software maintenance,
capability upgrades - Ongoing communication strategy support
- Ongoing integration with overall IT strategy
44Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI)
45Ascension Health
46CHRISTUS
47Bon Secours Health System
48Air Force Medical Service
Knowledge Junction TM Concept
49Lessons Learned
- People to People Connection is critical!
- Executive Support is required to gain acceptance.
- Link directly to the core strategies of the
organization. - Tools Templates simplify the process for
participation. - Dont over-engineer the process of sharing!
- Maintain flexibility stay focused on needs!
50Lessons Learned
- Prototyping pilot new tools with small groups.
- Patience it takes time and behavioral change
for this to become the way we work. - Self Service make it easy and rewarding for
people to utilize the tools themselves. - Success Stories build momentum and recognize
the - heroes.
- Partner with IT technology can greatly enhance
the - collaboration and sharing process.
51Final Thoughts
- Specific responsibility for connecting the dots
increases the speed of connection define who
will be responsible for the knowledge sharing
strategy. - Performance improvement can be multiplied by
spreading ideas from one department or facility
to others integrate performance improvement
resources into the design. - Recognition for sharing increases participation
both formal and informal communication is key. - A focus on connection increases the speed of
adoption of proven practices proactively manage
the social networks.