The Quality Improvement Challenge. Richard J. Banchs

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problem statement.

       Write your first draft of a Project Charter; make sure it has the six “must‐haves.” You will probably have to estimate the goals and timelines.

      SUMMARY QUIZ

      1 What are three common steps used when writing a problem statement?The ideal state, current state, and gapThe current state, ideal state, solutionsThe pain points, current state, solutionsThe root causes, solutions, current stateType A, type B, and type C

      2 What is a Project Charter?An important document for every projectA definition of the scope and objectives of the projectA cooperative effort between the Primary Sponsor, the team leader, and the QI teamA living document that can be modified as more information becomes availableAll of the above

      3 What are some of the critical elements for all Project Charters?Suppliers, inputs, processes, and outputsThe Voice of the Customer and the Voice of the StakeholderThe Problem Statement, scope, metrics, targets, and timelinesThe problem and the data to support the problemThe primary and supplemental sponsors

      4 Once you create a Project Charter, it is “set in stone.”TrueFalse

      5 What is a statement that defines the problem and the undesirable outcomes from the customer’s perspective?A need statementA Project CharterA SIPOC diagramA Problem StatementAn aim statement

      6 Which of the following statements defines a well‐written Problem Statement?Is clear, precise, without unnecessary medical or technical jargonExplains the extent of the problemDescribes the problem at the level where the root cause is not yet knownProvides available supporting dataAll of the above

      7 A “business case” includes all the following EXCEPTa brief explanation of the reasons to address the problem;the consequences of not addressing the problem;the causes of the problem;the link between the problem, the project, and the clinical priorities; orthe goals we want to achieve.

       Key: 1a, 2e, 3c, 4b, 5d, 6e, 7c

PART III THE SECOND “R”: THE RIGHT PEOPLE

      STORIES FROM THE FRONT LINES OF HEALTHCARE: TURN‐AROUND TIME FOR X‐RAYS IN THE ED

      Dr. Ashley Nixon was an Emergency Department (ED) physician at Mercy Hospital. She and her colleagues staffed the surgical care track of the ED. She took pride in her work and her ability to provide high‐quality, efficient care to her patients but was becoming increasingly concerned about the long turn‐around time for X‐rays. The time to get an X‐ray result once the order was in had more than doubled in the last six months. This was affecting patient flow and her ability to provide timely care for her patients. Dr. Nixon decided to launch a QI project to improve the situation. After evaluating the current process, she decided to make some changes she thought would improve turn‐around time for X‐rays. She discussed these changes with Dr. Edward Mosley, a colleague. He agreed that she had a good plan and that the changes would help expedite the turn‐around time for results. Dr. Nixon emailed the revised process to the ED nurse managers and the radiology manager, indicating they would start the revised process the following week. On Monday morning, Dr. Nixon met significant resistance. Nurses and radiology techs said they didn’t know anything about the revised process and would need their managers’ approval before proceeding with “doing anything differently.” When asked for advice, Dr. Mosley suggested to Dr. Nixon that she talk directly to the nurse and radiology manager. Over the ensuing months, several meetings were scheduled, but without the active involvement of a senior leader, no progress was made. Delays continued with X‐rays in the ED.

       What was the problem? How did Dr. Nixon approach it? What was the result? Why did this happen?

      What Is a Primary Sponsor?

      All projects need a sponsor. A Primary Sponsor can be a physician leader, departmental chair, division chief, executive leader, director, or high‐level unit manager.

       A Primary Sponsor is the senior leader who has access to the necessary resources and the authority to ensure the success of the improvement project or change initiative.

      As a senior leader in the organization, the Primary Sponsor can “open doors” for the improvement team. The Primary Sponsor uses connections, influence, and a power base to increase buy‐in, resolve cross‐functional issues, and mitigate resistance from the frontline stakeholders.

      The Critical Role of a Primary Sponsor

      The role of the Primary Sponsor in the QI project is critical. The Primary Sponsor serves an essential function for the project team in helping move the project forward and achieve objectives. These are the most important functions of the Primary Sponsor:

       Establish priorities for competing initiatives.

       Resolve cross‐functional issues.

       Remove roadblocks; the Primary Sponsor serves as the point person to address barriers that interfere with the project’s progression.

       Help manage change by building a coalition of key stakeholders to support the change.

      One of the most common causes of QI project failure is the absence or lack of meaningful involvement of the Primary Sponsor to provide the necessary leadership and support for the change initiative. The Primary Sponsor needs to be visible, engaged, and active throughout the lifecycle of the project.

      To appropriately fulfill the role, the Primary Sponsor must spend time communicating directly with the front lines to help the QI Team gain buy‐in for the project. One of the greatest contributors to success in change initiatives is an active and visible Primary Sponsor. The greatest obstacle to success is ineffective change management sponsorship to support the QI project (Prosci 2016).

      You may be approached by a senior leader with a request for an improvement project. Most likely this leader will become your Primary Sponsor. If you have the opportunity to choose your Primary Sponsor, there are a number of requirements you should keep in mind. While all Primary Sponsors are senior leaders, not all senior leaders should be the Primary Sponsor. Ideally, the leader you have chosen to be your project’s Primary Sponsor has the following characteristics:

       is well

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