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Module VI Understanding Systems Systems
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Systems System Behavior Feedback Understanding Systems
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Learning Objectives Systems – Clarify terms – Describe characteristics Complexity – Clarify terms – Describe characteristics
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SYSTEMS
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Definition System: a collection of parts that interact with each other to form an interdependent whole
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Characteristics of Systems “Systems have specific purposes… A system’s parts must all be present for the system to carry out its purpose optimally A system’s parts must be arranged in a certain way for the system to carry out its purpose Systems maintain their stability through fluctuation and adjustments Systems have feedback ” Source: Anderson and Johnson. Systems Thinking: From Concepts to Causal Loops. Pp. 3-4.
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Organizations as systems Organization a “social structure created by individuals to support the collaborative pursuit of specified goals” - Scott, 2011.
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Clarify Terms District School Grade Class Nested Systems
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Formal System http://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html
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One System http://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html
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Activity: Informal System? http://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html
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Example: Informal System Women and Infants
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Clarify Terms Systems Thinking: “…a discipline for seeing wholes…” - Peter Senge “…an interdisciplinary field that studies the interconnected factors that shape the behavior of complex systems that occur across many domains – including nature, business, science, public health, and society.” - Hassmiller Lich, Ginexi, Osgood, Mabry
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COMPLEX SYSTEMS: DETAIL AND DYNAMIC COMPLEXITY
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Detail Complexity Systems with a large number of parts Do not change over time Difficult to understand as a whole 16
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Dynamic Complexity Dynamic complexity leads to counterintuitive behavior of complex systems because: – Things change over time – Lag time between cause and effect – Nonlinear relationships – Feedback loops 17
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Dynamic Complexity “…cause and effect are subtle, and where the effects over time of interventions are not obvious”
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Dynamic Complexity Dynamic complexity leads to counterintuitive behavior of complex systems because: – Things change over time – Lag time between cause and effect – Nonlinear relationships – Feedback loops 19
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Dynamic Complexity Dynamic complexity leads to counterintuitive behavior of complex systems because: – Things change over time – Lag time between cause and effect – Nonlinear relationships – Feedback loops 20
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WHO Surgical Checklist
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Characteristics http://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html
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Dynamic Complexity Dynamic complexity leads to counterintuitive behavior of complex systems because: – Things change over time – Lag time between cause and effect – Nonlinear relationships – Feedback loops 23
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Dynamic Complexity Nonlinear relationships: “the same action has dramatically different effects in the short run and the long run... an action has one set of consequences locally and a very different set of consequences in another part of the system... and obvious interventions produce nonobvious consequences” - Diane Kelly
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Tendency: Linear Thinking
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Nonlinear Thinking
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Dynamic Complexity Dynamic complexity leads to counterintuitive behavior of complex systems because: – Things change over time – Lag time between cause and effect – Nonlinear relationships – Feedback loops 27
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Tradeoffs Problem Time Better Worse Short term Long term A. High leverage intervention B. Low leverage intervention
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Tradeoffs Problem Time Better Worse Short term Long term High leverage intervention Low leverage intervention Program A Program B
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Tradeoffs Problem Time Better Worse Short term Long term Program A Program B
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More on “hard systems problems” Wicked problems Problem in which stakeholders do not agree on what the problem is, or even if there is a problem – threatening collective impact. - Vennix, 1999.
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More on “hard systems problems” Messy problems “actually consist of multiple smaller problems that cannot be solved independently, and which often involve ‘socio-political’ or ‘moral- spiritual’ issues” - Gray and Gill, 2009.
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Systems Now, step back from the details and think of a system as the important forces shaping a problem you want to address. Many different kinds of “systems” in which we might intervene to address a problem: – The state health department (or communication within it…) – Early childhood systems – All subsystems touching CSHCN – Forces shaping how states react to federal Health Care Reform, or – Life-course determinants of women’s health (MCH x chronic x infectious disease)
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Bringing science to study systems Systems Science “an interdisciplinary field that studies the interconnected factors that shape the behavior of complex systems that occur across many domains – including nature, business, science, public health, and society.” - Hassmiller, Ginexi, Osgood, Mabry, 2013.
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Summary Systems – Clarify terms – Describe characteristics Complexity – Clarify terms – Describe characteristics
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