The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul GawandeBy Jon Miller | Post Date: April 6, 2010 11:14 PM | Comments: 0
I just finished reading and thoroughly enjoyed The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Dr. Atul Gawande. I recommend it. Mark Graban at the Lean Blog has written passionately and at length about the value of checklists in improving outcomes and patient safety in the context of lean healthcare. To learn more about how something as simple as a checklist can make double digit improvements, read Mark articles including the use of surgical checklists, a helpful demonstration of how Mark uses a checklist to create his podcasts, and a rebuttal of a rather poor Wall Street Journal review of The Checklist. Mark also points us to a The Checklist author Dr. Atul Gawando featured on National Public Radio and on the Daily Show. The book is short, easy to read, filled with stories that open our eyes to the realities of how medicine is practiced in surgical theaters around the world. The book is also a personal journey from skepticism to belief, one that many of us leading or having gone through a lean transformation can relate closely to. The trip Dr. Gawande made to Boeing to learn from aviation checklist experts and how he subsequently applied this learning is also fascinating. The book gave me a new appreciation for how hard it can be to write a good checklist, as well as the importance of checklists as opportunities to communicate, rather than simply police and catch errors. Aside from being sold once again on the value of checklists and the urgency of spreading the practical message of lean to healthcare and other critical fields as soon as possible, the book left me with three gems which caused me to think. The Four Big Killers It's Not About Soap! The second gem was a test by the World Health Organization to promote the use of soap in a village in Pakistan as a means of reducing illness in children. This story diverged slightly from checklists but addressed wider issues surrounding getting people to adopt something new. The promotion of hand washing resulted in a decrease in illnesses. The power of the story for me was the message "it's not the soap!" The soap was not necessarily the best brand anti bacterial soap. People in the test did not always use the soap exactly as the testers planned. They already had access to soap. Yet the result of people caring, observing, providing a partial solution and following up was a behavior change in the villagers. The analogy that struck me was that in kaizen, 5S or any sustained lean effort, the it's less important to do 5S perfectly, or get big kaizen ideas, or to march step by step through a TPM program along a rigid time line committed to management. These things might even be counterproductive. The routine of washing hands (doing kaizen) is the important thing, and the soap (5S, TPM etc) may not even be all that important. My name is Jon Miller and I'm here to remove ignorance The third gem was something called "activation phenomenon". It is as simple as the practice of having the surgical team each say their name and role at the start of the surgery. This mentally activates everyone and demonstrably elevates engagement and performance. What? They don't normally introduce themselves before surgery? you may ask. After reading this book, I don't want to know what other things are not common practice in an operating room. However I am powerfully encouraged that this book is bringing to light some powerful common sense approaches to making healthcare delivery more reliable. An Eight Step Change Management Checklist for Implementing Checklists Most of us would probably agree that a major business transformation requires major cultural changes, a shift in authority, responsibility and expectations about how we serve customers. Implementing a simple checklist into a surgical environment is surely a much easier endeavor. Dr. Atul Gawande writes: "...using the checklist involved a major cultural change, as well - a shift in authority, responsibility and expectations about care" It's funny how changing even the smallest thing like saying who we are, what we do and checking that we are ready to start requires changing some of the biggest things like how we think of who we are, what we do and what we will do before getting started. Maybe we need a change management checklist... oh wait, no.
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