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A Year of Living Measurably: From Scorecard to Quality Improvement Projects Adam Helbig, MSEd. Manager, Education & Training Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Daniel McLinden, EdD Assistant Vice President, Education & Training Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Assistant Professor Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine University of Cincinnati Rebecca Phillips, PhD Vice President, Education & Training Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Associate Professor Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine University of Cincinnati 1
Objectives •! Apply template for using scorecard results to determine improvement targets for educator practice and learner outcomes. •! Review the identification, design and implementation of quality improvement projects for measurable training outcomes. •! Obtain practical information about quality improvement methodology applied to education to positively influence stakeholder perception of the learning function
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Cincinnati Children’s at a Glance Our Vision: to be the leader in improving child health Patient Care: Admissions (includes short stay): 27,932 Emergency Department Visits: 93,456 Home Care Visits: 14,147 Outpatient Visits: 787,365 Surgical Procedures: 29,170 Patient Encounters: 925,944
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Cincinnati Children’s at a Glance Faculty and Staff: Faculty Pediatrics: 471 Surgery: 63 Radiology: 41 Anesthesia: 41 Pediatric Board Certified Subspecialists: 538 Subspecialty Fellows: 177 Active Medical Staff: 1,292 Total Employees: 10,680
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The Education Vision To be the leader in education and training in improving child health
What’s the Connection? The CCHMC Vision To be the leader in improving child health
Q3 Status
Q3 Status Nursing
Pediatric
Q3 Overall
The Education Vision To be the leader in education and training in improving child health
! Percentage of ratings at the top of the scale
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Operational – How well we implement
Environment – How we are perceived
Performance – How well we achieve our goals
The Education Strategy Map Indicators of goals Family centered Care
Title: Training required for organization readiness is complete. Rationale: Specific courses have been designated as required to ensure that all employees meet certain standards and where appropriate, the organization can comply with the requirements of external accrediting agencies.
Patient Safety
Deliver High Quality Educational programs
Preferred training site for medical residents Preferred training site for nursing
Calculation: Number of employees who have completed training and have done so within the mandated time period divided by the number that should have completed the training programs and expressed as a percent. Data Sources: ELM databases. Reporting Frequency: Quarterly Target: 97%
Preferred training site for allied health
Direction: Increasing or stable
Preferred site for continuing medical education
Responsible for managing progress: CCHMC managers
Build organizational readiness
Notes: The measure will start with July 1, 2006 new hires because accurate data sources have become available for this group. These measures will start with training required for all employees (e.g., HIPAA) will add other courses as the year progresses. Course must be in the ELM.
Responsible for managing data: Adam Helbig
The right content at the right time
Our Process Vision, Mission, Strategy Map the relationships Create the Measures Measure, Monitor, & Report Improve How we applied quality improvement approaches with data to improve educator practice and learner outcomes
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“At least 44,000 Americans die as a result of medical errors … and the number could be as high as 98,000...(p.1).”
To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System, Institute of Medicine, 2000. http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?isbn=0309068371
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Reframe the Future Institute of Medicine Health Process Redesign Rules •! •! •! •! •! •! •! •! •! •!
Care based on continuous healing relationships Customization based on patient needs and values The patient is the source of control Shared knowledge and the free flow of information Evidence-based decision making Safety as a system property The need for transparency to patients for informed decision-making Anticipation of needs Continuous decrease in waste Cooperation among clinicians
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Education and Training’s Response to Institute of Medicine Health Process Redesign Rules •! Design education for sustained behavior change, help beyond the learning event, how manager helps •! Education based on learner/organizational needs with ability to test out •! Learner is source of control: ease of access •! Learn from the learners experience during and post event •! Standardize evaluation so management and staff determine what’s useful not the educator •! Education delivery is a system property: safe to learn and applies in work context •! Demonstrated impact for informed decision-making •! Needs based •! Targeted content •! Team development
Vision, Mission, Strategy Map the relationships Create the Measures Measure, Monitor, & Report
The Improvement Model*
Improve
What are we trying to accomplish? How will we know that a change is an improvement? What changes can we make that will result in improvement?
*Found in Job Aid Act
Plan
Study
Do
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What are we trying to accomplish? Aim Achieve compliance rate of 97% on the Education’s Contribution to Organization Readiness measure on Education Scorecard by 6/30/09.
Specific Measurable Actionable Reasonable Time bound
What are we trying to accomplish? Key Drivers Aim Achieve compliance rate of 97% on the Education’s Contribution to Organization Readiness measure on Education Scorecard by 6/30/09.
Managers of new employees know what training is required of their direct reports New employees know the requirements based upon their positions.
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Education Contribution to Organizational Readiness by Quarter
How will we know that a change is an improvement? Overall
100.0% Goal
97%
95.0%
Compliance Rate
90.0%
85.0%
80.0%
78%
75.0%
70.0% FY07Q1
FY07Q2
FY07Q3
FY07Q4
FY08Q1
FY08Q2
FY08Q3
FY08Q4
FY09Q1
FY09Q2
FY09Q3
Fiscal Year, Quarter
What changes can we make that will result in improvement?
Aim Achieve compliance rate of 97% on the Education’s Contribution to Organization Readiness measure on Education Scorecard by 6/30/09.
Key Drivers Managers of new employees know what training is required of their direct reports New employees know the requirements based upon their positions.
Design Changes /Interventions Organization Readiness website on Learning@CCHMC tab is updated. Automatic email notification sent to noncompleters. = Intervention Complete and spread = Intervention being spread or worked on
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*Found in Job Aid
Use of PDSA Cycles* TA DA A S
Evidence Best Practice Testable Ideas
A
P
S
D
Very Small Scale Test
P D
D
S
P
A
A
P
S
D
Changes That Result in Improvement
Implementation of Change
Wide-Scale Tests of Change
Follow-up Tests Plan – Describe the Test Do – Test the Changes Study – Did the Results Match Predictions Act - Decide to Act, Adapt or Abandon
The Opportunity for Quality Improvement Science in Training and Development We are not doing research, we are making decisions with data that provides evidence. Business decisions cannot wait for unequivocal information to proceed.
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Spread of Interventions
Spreading the Methodology/Practice
Similar Classes or Projects
Other Scorecard Projects and Practices
One Class or Project
Time
Bibliography Berwick, D. “A User’s Manual for the IOM’s ‘Quality Chasm Report’,” Health Affairs, vol. 21, No.3, pp. 80-90. Britto, MT; Anderson, JT; Kent, WM; Mandel KE & et al. (2006). "Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center: Transforming Care for Children and Families," Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, vol. 32, No.10 pp.541-48.. Buckingham, M. & Coffman, C. First Break All the Rules. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1999. Committee on the Quality of Healthcare in America. Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century. Institute of Medicine: 2001. Langley, GJ; Nolan, KM; Norman, CL; Provost, LP; Nolan, TW. The Improvement Guide: A Practical Approach to Enhancing Organizational Performance. San Francisco:Jossey-Bass, 1996. Deming, WE. Out of the Crisis. Cambridge: MIT, 1986/2000. Deming, WE. The New Economics for Industry, Government, Education. 2nd edition. Cambridge:MIT, 1992/2000 Kotter, JP & Cohen, DS The Heart of Change: Real-Life Stories of How People Change their Organizations. Boston: HBS Press, 2002. Rogers, E. Diffusion of Innovation. 4th edition. New York Free Press, 1995 Scholtes, PR; Joiner, BL; & Streibel, BJ The Team Handbook Third Edition. Oriel, Inc., 2003 Senge, P. The Fifth Discipline. New York: Doubleday, 1990. Wheeler, DJ. Understanding Variation: the Key to Managing Chaos. 2nd edition. Knoxville: SPC Press, 1993.
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ASTD 2009 International Conference & Exposition
W202: A Year of Living Measurably: From Scorecard to Quality Improvement Projects
Learning Objectives: !
Apply template for using scorecard results to determine improvement targets for educator practice and learner outcomes.
!
Review the identification, design and implementation of quality improvement projects for measurable training outcomes.
!
Obtain practical information about quality improvement methodology applied to education to positively influence stakeholder perception of the learning function.
Adam Helbig, MSEd Manger, Education & Training Department Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
[email protected] Daniel McLinden, EdD Assistant Vice President, Education & Training Department Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
[email protected] Rebecca Phillips, PhD Vice President, Education & Training Department Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
[email protected]
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A Year of Living Measurably: From Scorecard to Quality Improvement Projects
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A Year of Living Measurably: From Scorecard to Quality Improvement Projects
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