Ken Segel relays insights learned by executives of a large academic health system when they went to the frontline to silently observe worker/patient interactions, in this post, originally published on Mark Graban's Lean Blog.
A hospital chief nursing officer (CNO) at a major academic health system nailed it with that statement. It's a core diagnosis of what's moving in the wrong direction in American healthcare, and a hint of simple, powerful steps to help leaders start on the path to make it better.
She had just come back from a structured “go and see” experience where leaders had directly and silently observed the work (for 40 minutes) of an RN admitting a patient to an inpatient medical-surgical unit, a process that occurs more than a hundred times a day.
The CNO, like most others who take the time to do this, took away some fundamental, typical impressions:
The CNO and her colleagues realized the opportunity that this represented. By better supporting the people who do the work to enable them to solve the frontline problems, these leaders recognized the chance to make things better for patients, and staff, and every type of desirable outcome for the health system. But how?
Another few insights from the leaders provided the needed clues:
First, most of the problems the nurse encountered crossed out of the unit to other “internal customer” and supplier departments, such as the emergency room, IT and pharmacy. So while the problems were regularly and repeatedly apparent to anyone who would directly observe the process, they couldn't easily be solved within the nursing unit.
The big “aha” came when the CNO and the rest of the C-suite leaders realized that if they were regularly in touch with what's happening in the core processes of the organization, repeatedly — and organized their time to make sure the whole leadership system was oriented accordingly — then problems could be worked across department walls to root cause solutions in much more efficient fashion (some in almost “real time”).
It is not the leaders' role to determine solutions in top-down fashion, but to link their work directly to know what problems the staff are facing, and to help the staff design improvements by clearing barriers, providing resources, and coaching to develop each layer in the organization as capable problem solvers and coaches of problem solving.
Secondly, the leaders reflected on how, today, they typically spent their time instead. The answer was meetings, for hour after hour after hour (this may sound familiar to other healthcare leaders).
In meetings, the conversation about problems and improvement opportunities is often more abstract, less fact-based, and more subject to power and personality dynamics. Meetings also typically involve few who do or know the actual work, and can lack urgency to act to make things better, let alone act to address the real problems at their root. In the meantime, the core problems and wastes of the organization unnecessarily roll on.
The professional and operational silos of healthcare have always predisposed it to too much bureaucracy and politics in problem solving. The rapid consolidation and continued increases in red tape affecting the sector have only made things worse. As leaders get pulled more and more into meeting rooms (as institutions get bigger and more bureaucratic), the potential to capture the value of a supportive focus on frontline operational excellence and problem solving gets harder. In other words, leaders are often too far from the problems and processes that keep their providers and staff from delivering the highest value and quality to patients.
Helping today's healthcare leaders act on their fundamental responsibility to create and oversee the systems needed to drive operational excellence across their complex enterprises is the simplistic answer. But that can sound daunting, abstract and like jargon to leaders. So, because every journey begins with a step, how to get started?
Our CNO's spot-on diagnosis suggests some powerful first steps.
In a world where the language of improvement can often feel like the next “flavor of the month,” helping leaders focus on the fundamental truths uttered by their colleagues can help set the direction toward operational excellence, with clarity and energy, with less jargon and less harbored doubt. “We have gotten too far away from our people, and the processes they do every day. And we can change that.”