Coaching & Mentoring Teams Debbie Barnard, MSc, CPHQ January 30, 2013.

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Coaching & Mentoring Teams Debbie Barnard, MSc, CPHQ January 30 , 2013

Transcript of Coaching & Mentoring Teams Debbie Barnard, MSc, CPHQ January 30, 2013.

Page 1: Coaching & Mentoring Teams Debbie Barnard, MSc, CPHQ January 30, 2013.

Coaching & Mentoring Teams

Debbie Barnard, MSc, CPHQ January 30 , 2013

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Start with the end in Mind

Challenge: Coaching/Mentoring to Get Results

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Context• Coaching Plan

– Starts at the beginning e.g. during a formal collaborative, during the pre-work and is concentrated during the “action periods”

– What you are hoping to facilitate:• Focus the team on actual “doing” i.e. rapid cycle tests or

planned experiments• Have Teams experience breakthrough improvement• Teams spreading improvements across, sites, units etc. and

beyond• Teams collaborating/networking with others

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PrerequisiteThe Coach Must Have a Plan and

Skilled/Access to Tools

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Measure: e.g. At least 80% of your team will achieve their stated primary aim/goal by the end of the collaborativee.g. At the end of 6 months the team will achieve its stated aim and sustain that performance for at least 6 months post intervention

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Reflection

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DiscussionIf you’re currently responsible for coaching/mentoring an improvement team(s):1.Do you have a goal and if yes; 2.Is that goal actually written down and if yes;3.Is that goal tied to the executive sponsor or senior leader who is aligned to your project/Initiative;4.Is that goal tied to your formal performance management system?

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There a many tools available to support your work, identify one that best works to help you to

support your team(s)

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Key Elements

Team Status– Are they actually doing work, or are they caught in

the “what we plan to do hole”?– Stability– Dynamics

• Do they ask for help if/when they need it (Coach or Senior Leader)

– Activity • are they having conversations, huddles to plan/review

PDSAs

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Key Elements

Team Progress– Testing changes– Data collection/ measurement– Executing change/adjusting as needed– Seeing improvement results

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Key ElementsCollaborative Faculty/Local Improvement Advisor Plays “Catch Ball” with the Teams

– Feedback and coaching from reports– The coach prepares for these calls and uses the

presentations/discussion to facilitate a learning environment

– The agenda is guided by the needs observed by the Coach

– Ad hoc workgroups or special topic calls– Ad hoc face with teams (if possible)– Email list serve– Sharing of documents and tools (private website)

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Key ElementsLeadership (Active Engagement)

– Is there an identified executive sponsor– Attending learning sessions/opportunities with the team– Regularly reviewing the work/progress with the team– Actively supportive

• (i.e. resources both non-monetary and monetary as needed)• Communication to other SMT/Board/Other applicable areas• Demonstration the alignment with the organization’s strategic

directions• Removing the barriers

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From IHI – Tips for Successful Calls/Interim Face to Face

1. Focus on the Change Package, e.g., elements of the system, changes teams are making

2. Encourage and/or engineer team participation, e.g., plan team presentations for conference calls (invite teams, identify speakers, publicize on Listserv, etc.)

3. Early on Collaborative teams are usually quiet; more content from faculty is ok, but make transition to more team-to-team discussion as the Collaborative progresses

TAKE

AWAY

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IHI Resources SlidesTAKE

AWAY

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© 2004 Institute for Healthcare Improvement

The Channels of Communication Are Important

SHAREINFORMATION

SHAPE BEHAVIOR

GeneralPublicationsflyersnewslettersvideosarticlesposters

PersonalTouchletterscardspostcards

InteractiveActivitiestelephoneemailvisitsseminarslearning setsmodeling

Face-to-Faceone-to-onementoringshadowing

© 2002 Sarah W. Fraser

PublicEventsroad showsfairsconferencesexhibitionsmass mtgs

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© 2004 Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Strengthen the Social System

Content, context, and community Understand the relevant circumstances

affecting peoples’ ability/willingness to adopt the changes: transition issues and technical support

Take advantage of the existing relationships within the system

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© 2004 Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Develop the Measurement and Feedback System

Data/reporting at different levels within the organization

Both leadership and frontline

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© 2004 Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Tips for Measurement #1

Plot data over time Tracking a few key measures over time is the single most powerful tool a team can use.

% Patients with a Visit in Past Three Months

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Source: NHS Scotland & IHI Measurement for Improvement

We have 2 quarterly data points - is this an improvement?

Executive Time Series

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J F M A M J J A S O N D

Months

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Higher is better

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Source: NHS Scotland & IHI Measurement for Improvement

Are we assuming something like this?

Executive Time Series - linear trend

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J F M A M J J A S O N D

Months

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Source: NHS Scotland & IHI Measurement for Improvement

But it could be like this ...Executive Time Series - no trend

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40

60

80

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J F M A M J J A S O N D

Months

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ant

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© 2004 Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Tips for Measurement #2

The perfect is the enemy of the good.

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© 2004 Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Tips for Measurement #3

Sampling

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© 2004 Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Tips for Measurement #4

Integrate measurement into the daily routine

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© 2004 Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Tips for Measurement #5

Use both words and numbers

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Mentoring Discussion

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Thank You!!!