Quality: 4 Ways We Make It Harder Than It Has to Be
(2010-11-22 13:03:14)
标签:
杂谈 |
分类: 企业管理 |
Believing in the Power of Simplicity
Fortunately my colleague’s operation went fine, but his general point is important: the steps required to make quantum improvements in quality and other outcomes are often trivial. And because the necessary actions do seem so simple, ironically, organizations of all types frequently don’t bother with them. As Greg Brenneman, former COO of Continental Airlines has written, simplicity is a huge barrier to competitive imitation and to taking action, because people think, “if it were that simple, we would already have done it.”
Donald Berwick, formerly of the Institute of Healthcare Improvement, created the 100,000 lives project to institute practices that could reduce the many thousands of unnecessary deaths occurring in hospitals. The project was successful - one estimate was that over 120,000 lives were saved - by focusing on easy, simple actions. For example, Berwick ensured that beds of patients at risk of pneumonia were elevated at a 45 degree angle by giving power to everyone, ranging from nurses to nurses aids to janitors, to intervene to ensure the bed was at the proper angle, denoted by a mark on the wall.
Berwick’s initiative also focused on hand washing, which, outside of surgery, is done only about 60% of the time. That’s why during the SARS crisis in Asia a few years ago, the primary vector for the spread of the disease was the hands of healthcare workers. None of this is news to readers of physician Atul Gawande’s Better, a book that has important insights for improving the operations of all sorts of organizations.
The Big Idea
Another
Maintaining Focus
Yet another barrier to sustained quality improvement is boredom. Operational excellence requires not just focusing on numerous small steps and activities, but maintaining that focus over time. After Ford Motor Company engaged W. Edwards Deming to help with its quality improvements in the 1980s, the company became enamored with technology and the Internet in the late 1990s, losing its focus on quality and suffering product problems and greater costs.
As we have learned in the domain of educational reform, almost anything is possible for some period of time and on a small scale. What is much more difficult is scaling improvement efforts and maintaining them over a protracted period of time.
Developing Teams
And one more issue looms for organizations serious about quality-continuity in employment. My colleague talked to his nurses at Stanford and learned that few worked at Stanford full time or exclusively. They traveled from hospital to hospital, and in some cases worked for registries that operated as suppliers of contract labor. In a world of downsized, outsourced work, with dissatisfied employees prone to turn over at the first opportunity from organizations that show little loyalty to their employees, it is hard to assemble experienced teams that enjoy the benefits of learning from having worked together.