Creating a Positive Chain of Leadership
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Transcript Creating a Positive Chain of Leadership
Creating a Positive Chain
of Leadership
David Farrell, MSW, NHA
What Matters the Most?
Systems
Equipment
People
High Performing Nursing Homes
Three Common Elements Culture – person-centered care
Workforce commitment
Leadership practices
All three are interdependent
Grant, L. 2008
Results are Interrelated
Implement principles of culture change
Enhanced leadership practices
Employee satisfaction
Workforce stability
Low turnover, high retention, low absenteeism
Consumer satisfaction
Clinical outcomes
Regulatory compliance
Occupancy rate and mix
Grant, L. 2008
A Consumer Perspective on Quality Care:
The Residents’ Point of View
NCCNHR 1985
Kind
Caring
Staff
Know me as
an individual
Qualit
y Care
Drivers of Consumer Satisfaction
Caring staff
Competent staff
Choices and preferences
Nursing care
Responsive management
Respectfulness of staff
MyInnerView, Inc. 2010
Path to Improvement
Staff
Stability and
Engagement
Improved
Quality and
Satisfaction
© B&F Consulting Inc. 2011
www.BandFConsultingInc.com
Better
Census and
Resources
for More
Improvement
Drivers of Staff Engagement
Management cares about employees
Management listens to employees
Help with job stress
MyInnerView, Inc. 2010
Building Trust and Making a Statement
Presence
“You go into the rooms?”
Asking and delivering
Listening
Speaking with conviction
Painting the graffiti
Leadership Practices Matter Most
PersonCentered
Performance
Improvement
Process Improvement
Leadership Practices
Adapted from Albert Einstein Health
Foundation, Philadelphia, PA., 1990
The Impact of Leaders
Healthcare organizations
Fragile ecosystems
Leader’s actions influence:
Culture
Relationships
Staff engagement
Clinical outcomes
Quality of life
Person-Centered Care Leadership
Performance
Compassion
Relationships and Quality
People Paradigm
W. Edwards Deming:
Quality, the result, is a function of quality, the
process
Essential ingredients of the process:
Leaders and their people
Cannot improve interdependent systems and
processes of care until you progressively improve
interdependent, interpersonal relationships
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Theory of Relational Coordination
The effectiveness of care and service is
determined by the quality of communication
among staff
Which depends on the quality of the underlying
relationships
The quality of the relationships reinforce the
quality of the communication
Gittell, et al, 2008
Relational Coordination in Healthcare
Task interdependence
Uncertainty
Time constraints
Gittell
Healthcare Organizations
CNAs
Nurses
CNAs
Therapists
Nurses
Therapists
Physicians
Food Service
Food service
Within functions
Physicians
Across functions
Gittell
Trigger Relational Coordination
Leadership actions
Increase Communication
Frequency, timeliness
Accurate, transparent, frequent
Model problem solving
Enhance Staff Relationships
Shared goals
Enhance shared knowledge
Model mutual respect
Relational Coordination Works
Significantly associated with –
Enhanced resident quality of life
Higher nursing assistant job satisfaction
Evident in SNFs implementing personcentered care
Gittell, et al, 2008
Quality is All About Relationships
Between co-workers
Across departments
Between supervisors
Frontline and supervisors
Staff and residents
Between residents
Staff and resident’s family members
Eaton, S. 2001
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Thank You Cards
Cards are powerful
Send them to staff members’ homes
Birthday cards
Anniversary cards
Excellent attendance
“I appreciate you”
“I am glad you work for us. On behalf of the
residents, their families and your co-workers –
Thank you.”
Relationship Facilitation Strategies
Ample supplies at hand
Resident transfer equipment at hand
Report between shifts
Staffing configurations
Staff composition
Relational Coordination in Oakland
Key changes –
New name badges
Created efficiencies
Mitigate conflict
“Just in time” compassion
Tragedies in their lives
Enhancing Staff Relations
Karaoke
Kids Day
Heritage Days
Senior Prom
Weight Loss Challenge
Safety Huddles
Manage Relational Coordination
Our systems and structures of
communication create our
relationships and our culture
Relational Coordination
Applied to Staff Assignments
HIGH:
Consistent
Assignments
LOW:
Rotating
Assignments
Communication and Relationship Factors
© B & F Consulting, Inc. www.BandFConsultingInc.com
Relational Coordination
Applied to Shift Hand-off
HIGH:
Structured
Person to
person
discussion
with checklist
LOW:
Tape
recorded
Communication and Relationship Factors
© B&F Consulting Inc. 2011
www.BandFConsultingInc.com
Relational Coordination Applied to
Interdisciplinary Problem-solving
HIGH:
Root-cause
analysis
conducted by
PIP team led
to successful
pilot test and
then facilitywide adoption
LOW:
Conducted by
2 managers
and solution
rolled out via
in-service
Communication and Relationship Factors
© B & F Consulting, Inc.
Enhancing Relational Coordination
Follow QAPI systematic process Charter Performance Improvement Projects
Learn, teach and utilize
Ice breakers
Root-cause analysis
Brainstorming
Flow chart
Learning circle
Cause and Effect Diagram
Systems
Environment
People
Equipment/Supplies
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First 2 Hours Checklist
People support what they help create
Empowerment
Humility
Listen to others perspectives
Stakeholders –
Who is effected?
Who can help us understand this better?
Involvement = success of changes
Spread
Sustainability
Communication Builds Trust
Leadership Visibility
Rounds to trigger engagement
Engage the heart and minds of staff
What you do and say matters
Meet and greet, linger
Observe – processes of care, handoffs
Praise, build self-esteem
Build trust
Foster teamwork
Invisibility
“The problem is not motivation. It is the
ways in which we unintentionally demotivate employees.”
Quint Studer
Community Meetings
Performance data
Human resource
Clinical outcomes
Business results
Benchmark and compare
Celebrate positives
Employee and rookie of the month
Raffles
Patient safety chain
Communicate
Why?
How?
What?
The “Golden Rule”
Christianity
Do unto others, as you would have them do unto you
Islam
No one of you is a believer, until he loves for his brother what he loves
for himself
Judaism
What you hate, do not do to anyone
Hinduism
Do nothing to thy neighbor, which thou would not have them do to thee
Buddhism
Hurt not others with that which pains thyself
Confucianism
What you do not want done to thyself, do not do to others
Assume the Best
To bring out the best Self-fulfilling prophecy
Express confidence
Spark optimism
“I’m proud of all of you.”
Sutton, R., 2010
Bad is Stronger Than Good
Eliminate the negative
Interdependent work = larger negative effect
Grumpiness is contagious
Felps, W. 2001
Human Beings are Flawed
What exposes the flaws?
Workload, fatigue
Broken systems
Lighting, noise, distractions
Personal issues
Coworkers behaviors
Equipment, supplies
41
Who are the CNAs?
Total 1.47 million
Deliver 80% of hands-on care
90% are women
51% are non-white
Average age is 38
50% are near or below the poverty line
41% rely on public benefits
GAO, 2001
National Clearinghouse on the Direct care Workforce, 2006
BLS 2006, FHCEF 2010
Common Forms of Feedback
Silence
Negative
Positive
Deliver feedback to individuals and teams:
Timely
Be specific
Be sincere
End on a positive
Person-Centered Care Leadership
“We missed you yesterday…and the residents did
too. I hope your son is feeling better. We are a better
place when you are here.”
Performance
Compassion
Small Wins are the Path
Steps forward
Visible results
People Energized
Contact Information
David J. Farrell, MSW, LNHA
Director of Organizational Development
Regional Director of Operations
SnF Management
[email protected]
(510) 725-7409