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Sustaining and Spreading Changes

Sustaining and Spreading Changes. Robert A. Gabbay , MD, PhD Connie Sixta, PhD, RN, MBA. Creating an Improved Clinical System. Improvement. Hold Gains. Spread. NON-LINEAR MODEL BETTER. Improvement. Hold Gains. Spread. API Lloyd Provost. We’ve talked a lot about improvement.

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Sustaining and Spreading Changes

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  1. Sustaining and Spreading Changes Robert A. Gabbay, MD, PhD Connie Sixta, PhD, RN, MBA

  2. Creating an Improved Clinical System Improvement Hold Gains Spread NON-LINEAR MODEL BETTER Improvement Hold Gains Spread API Lloyd Provost

  3. We’ve talked a lot about improvement • Model for Improvement: • Aim • Measurement • Rapid testing of changes (PDSA cycles) • Test lots of ideas! • Expect some will “fail” • Most will need refinement (PDSA cycles)

  4. Sustaining Improvement Drop off in measures is common but preventable! • Initial excitement, urgency wear off. • Possible change fatigue. • Pay particular attention to yearly measures (foot exams, eye exams, LDL tests, etc.) as you approach end of initial 12 months. • If strong system of population management is in place should not see these decline. • Staff/Provider turnover, particularly among change leaders.

  5. Strategies to Hold the Gains • Establish and document standard processes • Make changes to job descriptions • Use measurement and audits • Pay attention to orientation and training • Assign ownership • Address the social aspects of change (who are the peer leaders, who talks to whom)

  6. Your Sustainability Experience • How are you checking to make sure changes are sticking? • What kind of shared ownership exists in your practice for your improvement data? • How have you been documenting revised processes and revised job duties?

  7. Test --> Implement --> Spread • Testing:Trying and adapting existing knowledge on small scale. Learning what works. • Change is not permanent. • Lot of experimentation and revisions. • Failure very useful here, even expected. • Few people impacted (limited staff, few patients). • Need to build improvement documentation for permanent implementation and spread of successful changes.

  8. Test --> Implement --> Spread • Implementing:Making this change a part of the routine day-to-day operation of your practice. • More people impacted than during testing. • Increased resistance compared to testing. • Generally requires more time than testing. • Some additional revisions may be needed. • But don’t expect failure here because you have documented success of changes.

  9. Test --> Implement --> Spread • Spreading:Adapting change to additional areas (other practices) or other patient populations beyond diabetes. • Useful for multi-site practices, systems. • Good population management processes work across chronic diseases and prevention. • Application to other conditions is important for NCQA recognition and Meaningful Use.

  10. What’s the status of each of your changes? Degree of belief that the changes will result in improvement Successful changes Beginning to implement and spread. High Changes still need further testing. There is a risk of moving to implementation and spread. Moderate Change 1 Unsuccessful proposed changes Change 2 Change 3 Low Testing and Adapting the Change Implementing Then Spreading the Change Developing the Change API –Lloyd Provost

  11. Adopter Categories Early Majority Late Majority Innovators Early Adopters Laggards 16% 2.5% 34% 13.5% 34% from Rogers, 1995

  12. The “Tipping Point” • “The name given to that one dramatic moment in an epidemic when everything can change all at once.” - M. Gladwell • “The part of the diffusion curve from about 10 percent to 20 percent adoption is the heart of the diffusion process. After that point, it is often impossible to stop the further diffusion of a new idea, even if one wished to do so.” - E. Rogers

  13. The “Diffusion Curve”

  14. Diffusion Depends on 6 Factors • Relative advantage over current practice • Compatibility with current culture and practice • Simplicity • Observability • Trial ability • Timing of return on investment Everett Rogers, The Diffusion of Innovation

  15. Developing a Spread Plan • Is improvement a key strategic initiative? • Is there a budget for spread? • Has time been allocated for spread? • Are goals and incentives aligned? • Identify and develop your spread champions. • Leverage your improvement data—tell your improvement story! • Document your ROI.

  16. A P S D A P S D A P S D Target Population for Spread Population of Focus for the initial improvement(pilot population) (Tests to adapt changes, then implementation) Rest of Practice or Across System

  17. The Communication Plan • Document benefits • Show comparative data • Use multiple communication channels • Explain changes succinctly • Involve successful units in providing technical support • Measure and provide feedback

  18. The Social System • Understand the relevant circumstances affecting peoples’ ability/willingness to adopt changes. • Take advantage of the existing relationships within the system. • Develop “communities of practice” among those with similar roles (peer-to-peer support and learning).

  19. Your Thoughts • What changes have you already spread? • How has the spread gone? • Any resistance to overcome? • What barriers are keeping you from spreading?

  20. References • Attewell, P. Technology Diffusion and Organizational Learning, Organizational Science, February, 1992 • Bandura A. Social Foundations of Thought and Action. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, Inc. 1986. • Brown J., Duguid P. The Social Life of Information. Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2000. • Cool et al. Diffusion of Information Within Organizations: Electronic Switching in the Bell System, 1971 –1982, Organization Science, Vol.8, No. 5, September - October 1997. • Dixon, N. Common Knowledge. Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2000. • Fraser S. Spreading good practice; how to prepare the ground, Health Management, June 2000. • Gladwell, M. The Tipping Point. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 2000. • Kreitner, R. and Kinicki, A. Organizational Behavior (2nd ed.) Homewood, Il:Irwin ,1978.

  21. References • Langley J, Nolan K, Nolan T, Norman, C, Provost L. The Improvement Guide. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass 1996. • Lomas J, Enkin M, Anderson G. Opinion Leaders vs Audit and Feedback to Implement Practice Guidelines. JAMA, Vol. 265(17); May 1, 1991, pg. 2202-2207. • Myers, D.G. Social Psychology (3rd ed.) New York: McGraw-Hill, 1990. • Prochaska J., Norcross J., Diclemente C. In Search of How People Change, American Psychologist, September, 1992. • Rogers E. Diffusion of Innovations. New York: The Free Press, 1995. • Wenger E. Communities of Practice. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1998.

  22. Questions?

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