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The VA as a Learning Organization: Rx for 21 st Century Healthcare. Joy W. Hunter, VHA Chief Learning Officer Sue Dyrenforth, Director, VHA National Center for Organizational Health. VA’s Patient Centered Cultural Transformation.
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The VA as a Learning Organization: Rx for 21st Century Healthcare Joy W. Hunter, VHA Chief Learning Officer Sue Dyrenforth, Director, VHA National Center for Organizational Health
VA’s Patient Centered Cultural Transformation Transform VA’s healthcare system into a fully engaged partnership between veteran, family & healthcare team through: • Organizational culture change • Reengineering of clinical & business processes • Reshaping the workforce • Redesigning physical plants
Transformational Goal: Distinguish VHA as a Learning Organization • Create a strategic learning culture that keeps VHA out front as a world class health care system • Recruit, develop & retain high performance workforce • Enhance adaptability to changing conditions • Quickly integrate latest innovations & best practices • Link continuous learning to performance excellence
A Learning Organization is Healthier for VA Employees • Garners independent thought • Increases ability to manage change • Improves quality • Develops a more committed workforce • Give people hope things can get better • Stretches perceived limits • Are in touch with fundamental needs to learn, improve our environment, be active vs. passive recipients Richard Karash (1995)
A Learning Organization is Healthier for Veterans • Strategically focused • Tool for organizational transformation • Learning is a tool for workforce development & culture change • Critical in achieving patient and employee satisfaction • Learning Leaders are strategic partners in achieving organizational outcomes • Competency vs. compliance drives learning needs
Treatment Plan: Provide Optimal Healthcare through a Dynamic Learning Culture Link Learning to Improved Organizational Health • Improved Employee Satisfaction • Improved Patient Satisfaction • Improved Patient Outcomes
Systemic wellness that nurtures success in complex and chaotic organizations A focus on the ‘how’ Not another thing to do: the way we do everything An incubator for transformation Healthy organizations are places where employees want to work and patients want to receive care. HOLISTIC ORGANIZATIONAL HEALTH: ALL THINGS CONNECTED
Transformational Workplace:All Things Connected Patient-Centric Employee Engagement Leadership Support
Significant Outcomes EMPLOYEE SATISFACTION PATIENT SATISFACTION TRAVEL TOGETHER EMPLOYEE SATISFACTION TRAVEL TOGETHER LOWER COSTS AND IMPROVED PERFORMANCE 9
Establishing VHA as a Learning Organization • Establishing Baseline Measures in 2008/09 • Harvard Learning Organization Survey • Scores from supervisors, managers, executives (n = 10,828) • Masie Voice of the Learner Survey • Scores from a random sample of VHA employees (n = 5,870) • Areas of the All Employee Survey matched by content to the Harvard Learning Organization Survey • Scores from supervisors, managers, executives (n = 20,814) • Scores from non-supervisory employees (n = 117,577) • Using measures in combination to establish a picture of the whole organization • Facility level correlations between survey instruments for groups matched at supervisor levels • Facility level correlations of instruments with selected Patient Satisfaction and Performance Measure scores
VA’s Learning Organization Health Assessment: Harvard Results (Management Perspective) • Supportive Learning Environment • Psychological safety • Appreciation of differences • Openness to new ideas • Time for reflection • Concrete Learning Processes & Practices • Experimentation • Information collection • analysis • Leadership that Reinforces Learning • Education & training • Information transfer
Harvard Survey: Emerging Themes and Trends • Psychological Safety sub-factor of the Harvard Survey • Measures how safe it is for employees to challenge authority figures and admit mistakes • At the facility level, reports of higher Psychological Safety by supervisors associated with higher patient satisfactions scores • Reports of higher Psychological Safety also associated with higher scores on performance measures
Important Relationships • Recent studies have found a link between psychological safety and vital clinical outcomes • The higher the Psychological Safety among staff, the shorter the stay in Intensive Care for veteran patients • The higher the Psychological Safety among staff, the lower the mortality in Intensive Care veteran patients
Relationships among Harvard Survey Variables and Patient Satisfaction Outcomes • Matched areas from the AES supervisor sample had several more significant relationships to outcomes with correlation values above .20 than the Harvard survey (10 vs. 3) • Slightly different patterns of relationships • AES relationships spread across outcomes • Harvard survey relationships concentrated in Appointment as soon as wanted for established patients • Matched areas from the AES non-supervisor sample had 30% more significant relationships with correlations above .20 vs. the supervisor sample • Similar patterns but the non-supervisor sample also had relationships with the All Things Considered and Appointments for established patients outcomes
Relationships among Harvard Survey Variables and Patient Satisfaction Outcomes • Moving below the 3 Top factors, the Psychological safety sub-factor from Harvard survey significantly related to 7 of 8 outcomes • All but All Things Considered • The following outcomes had the highest number of significant relationships with the 24 survey based variables (3 AES supv level, 3 AES non-supv level, 3 Harvard top factors, 9 Harvard sub-factors, 8 Masie items) • Inpatient overall quality (8) • Appointment as soon as wanted for established patients (10) • Appointment as soon as wanted for new patients (7)
Masie’s “VHA Voice of the Learner” Survey (Employee Perspective) • Response rate 6,052 (26%) from random cross-section of VHA field employees • ProClarity data cube available in May 2009 • Masie questions with significant correlations above .20 • Life at work is busier and I have less time to focus on learning – significant positive relationship with 5 of 8 outcomes (correlations range .21 to .26) • Higher demands associated with higher outcome scores • I expect how I learn will change dramatically in the next 2-3 years – significant negative relationship with 3 of 5 outcomes (correlations range -.20 to -.21) • Expected changes associated with lower outcome scores
Masie Survey Measures to Patient Satisfaction Outcomes • Masie survey questions with significant correlations above .20 • Life at work is busier and I have less time to focus on learning – significant positive relationship with 5 of 8 outcomes (correlations range .21 to .26) • Higher demands associated with higher outcome scores • I expect how I learn will change dramatically in the next 2-3 years – significant negative relationship with 3 of 5 outcomes (correlations range -.20 to -.21) • Expected changes associated with lower outcome scores
Implications and Next Steps • Early analysis of VHA level data indicate links exist between Learning Organization principles and outcome measures • Individual sites now need to examine their data and provide local context for the drivers of their scores • Proclarity Data cube access to Masie Voice of the Learner Survey (after 5/11), Harvard Learning Organization Survey, and All Employee Survey data http://aes.vssc.med.va.gov/Access/default.aspx