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Jonathan P. DeShazo, MPH PhD, Laishy Williams- Carlson, & Rich Pollack, MS
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Jonathan P. DeShazo, MPH PhD, Assistant Professor, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia Laishy Williams-Carlson, Vice President and CIO, Bon Secours Health System Inc. Richmond, Virginia Rich Pollack, MS, Vice President and CIO, Virginia Commonwealth University Health System, Richmond, Virginia
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History and significance of change management Transformational impact of IT Way in which IT changes an organization Organizational readiness for change Barriers to change Overcoming barriers to change
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It's not the progress I mind, it's the change I don't like. — Mark Twain
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Transformation is more than acquiring IT and inserting it into existing workflows and processes Requires reengineering health care processes Requires changing resource allocations Processes must be changed to optimize the contributions of IT The Lewing Group. (2005). Health Information Leadership Panel Final Report.
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Historically Stakeholders had no experience or frame of reference Stayed away from IT Had low expectations Now Internet fueled information revolution Stakeholders demand new IT capability Expectations are very high Briggs, B. (2002). CIOs Double as Change Agents. Health Data Management.
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Information technology in health care is increasing in importance in critical areas: Clinical Revenue cycle Strategic Moving from ‘old way’ to ‘new way’ usually includes information technology Because of this, now CIOs are high profile change agents Briggs, B. (2002). CIOs Double as Change Agents. Health Data Management.
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Manage unrealistic expectations Educating executive management Partnering internally and externally Communicating the role of information technology in meeting organizational goals Briggs, B. (2002). CIOs Double as Change Agents. Health Data Management.
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Is the process by which an organization migrates to its future state (its vision)
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CHANGE MANAGEMENT Starts with vision for change Facilitates journey Total systems approach Empowering individuals to be change agents TRADITIONAL PLANNING Starts with vision for change Delineate steps on journey ‘Roadmap’ or path oriented
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IT projects are a convergence of different stakeholders and different needs Different backgrounds interpret data and view decisions differently Culturally ingrained believes and practices are enormously resistant to change Friedman, C. (1999). Information technology leadership in academic medical centers: a tale of four cultures. Academic Medicine, 74(7), 795-799.
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Major challenges to success are often more behavioral than technical A ‘technically best’ solution can still fail because of people and organizational issues Change normally involves some threat to individual E.g. job security or disruption of routine Lorenzi, N. M., & Riley, R. T. (2000). Managing Change An Overview. J Am Med Inform Assoc, Mar-Apr; 7(2), 116-124.
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Technology never been embraced by clinicians Clinicians view IT as support, outside of their important activities Threat to patient privacy compared to paper Threat to rapport between providers and patients Depersonalization and deskilling Reluctance to learn new skills
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History of highly visible system failures IT is viewed as cost center not a strategic enabler Measuring ROI is expensive and neglected Perceived inequity: EHR benefits the organizations, patients, and payers, but not the people encumbered by using the system
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Fragmented organizations Decision-making is usually optimized for local benefit Decisions are made by a hospital but many users do not work for the hospital Lack of generally accepted standards
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Transformative leadership roles in key areas Executive leadership style supporting change Project & project management designed for transformative success
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Role is frequently underestimated yet makes a significant difference Must be personally committed to goals of project Must communicate frequently about commitment, reasoning, and link to mission Build consensus/ support across other functional areas (finance, QI, care, etc.) Must allocate and protect sufficient resources Merola, P., & Hopkins, R. (APR 2010). How Hospitals Can Successfully Implement Evidence-Based Guidelines. In M. H. R. B. Paper (Ed.).
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CMO, CNO, or CMIO Ensure medical staff involved in decisions Address and coach providers about upcoming change Display (and expect) commitment to multidisciplinary collaboration Merola, P., & Hopkins, R. (APR 2010). How Hospitals Can Successfully Implement Evidence-Based Guidelines. In M. H. R. B. Paper (Ed.).
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CIO Takes responsibility and resolve issues Communicates value to leadership Ensures multidisciplinary approach Protects resources Project management Clinicians Technical Training
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Project Manager- Identify scope and required resources. Maintain project plan. Communicate progress. Business Sponsor and/or Business Manager – Represents business function. Identifies support and removes business obstacles. Should be appropriate level for magnitude of project. IT Manager – Senior IT person assigned to project. Supports IT decision-making. Helps remove IT obstacles.
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History and significance of change management Transformational impact of IT Way in which IT changes an organization Organizational readiness for change Barriers to change Overcoming barriers to change
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