Chapter06.pptm

Chapter 6: Understanding and Improving Team Effectiveness in Quality Improvement

Outline

Introduction

Teams in health care

High performance teams and quality improvement

Understanding and improving the performance of quality improvement teams

Resources and Support

Team Processes

Conclusions

Introduction

Teams are the building blocks of health care organizations used for virtually every activity carried out in health care organizations, including clinical, management-focused and CQI activities

They are the primary vehicle through which CQI problems are analyzed, solutions are generated and change is evaluated

Understanding And Improving The Performance Of Quality Improvement Teams

A microsystem is one of several subsystems of a larger system that is integral to system performance (Nelson et al. 2002)

A health system is composed of many subsystems, including the clinical microsystems

These front-line systems or teams are charged with meeting the needs of the patient population

These microsystems provide the directs services that result in positive patient outcomes, provider and patient safety, system efficiency, and patient satisfaction

Understanding And Improving The Performance Of Quality Improvement Teams

Teams are:

People working together towards specific goals

using multiple interconnected processes

producing performance outcomes, and

having access to information about the team’s performance

Teams must:

adapt to changing circumstances,

ensure the satisfaction of team members, and

maintain and improve their performance over time.

Teams In Health Care

To diagnose, treat, and follow up with a patient requires information from multiple sources, and, very often, the involvement of multiple individuals

Patient-centered multispecialty teams are increasingly important

Healthcare has moved away from organizational structures based on functional areas of technical expertise (e.g. nursing, surgery) and to functionally integrated organizational structures with clinical care teams based on patient needs (e.g. women’s services, cancer care services)

Teams In Health Care

Teams and supporting organizational structures do not spontaneously form, and are not always easily managed

The functional nature of most health care works against the formation and maintenance of teams

Reward systems are typically designed around individual rather than team focus

Where teams do exist, performance is, more often than not, suboptimal

If the key elements necessary for teams to perform to their maximum potential are not addressed, teams can easily exhibit poor communication, member dissatisfaction, patient dissatisfaction, disjointed care provision, and inefficient and ineffective operations nested in a cumbersome bureaucracy (Hackman 2002).

High Performance Teams And Quality Improvement

Teams are critical to success in quality improvement because:

Individuals on the ground in teams understand the nuances and manifestations of problems in a way which may not be visible to senior management

Individuals involved in a dysfunctional process are usually those who are most knowledgeable about the process and its context

Individuals at the front lines often have the most feasible suggestions for improvement

Addressing quality problems requires the support of all individuals in the organization, not simply those at a senior level

High-functioning teams empower people by providing opportunities for meaningful participation in problem identification and problem solving.

Understanding and Improving the Performance of Quality Improvement Teams

The task

Team Characteristics

Team Composition and Size

Team Relationships and Status

Psychological Safety

Team Norms

Stage of Team Development

The Task

A team’s primary task will affect many other aspects of team management, such as team size, and team composition, and the manner in which decisions are made

Teams must have a shared understanding of their goals

Teams involved in CQI must be clear about their authority to implement change

Team Characteristics, Composition and Size

The optimal team size depends upon the nature of the team, its goals, and tasks

Teams must be sufficiently large to have the requisite expertise and have adequate diversity and expertise to inform all aspects of the team’s tasks and goals

Teams should not be so large that they are cumbersome, difficult to manage, have trouble reaching consensus or following an appropriate timeline

A team size of 7 is a general rule of thumb (derived from experience rather than scientific evidence)

Team Relationships and Status

CQI is based on the philosophy of participation of all team members

Team members bring with them their roles and status from regular organizational life, as well as existing interpersonal relationships and conflicts

Preformed relationships (such as those between physicians and nurses) and associated status systems influence the effectiveness of a team

Status differences can stifle participation

Individuals from a lower status group are less likely to contribute than those of higher status

For CQI teams, such status differences are dysfunctional and need to be addressed by a leader with adequate authority to do so

Psychological Safety

Team psychological safety is: shared belief that the team is safe for interpersonal risk taking(Edmonson 1999)

CQI requires individuals to be forthcoming and honest about quality problems

This requires a belief by each individual team member that they can speak without fear of intimidation, condescension, or castigation

Team members need to feel psychologically safe if they are to feel secure and capable of changing (Schein & Bennis 1965)

Team Norms

A norm is a standard of behavior that is shared by team members

Norms have a strong impact on individuals in organizations and teams

Norms set expectations and establish standards of behavior and performance

Behavioral norms consist of the rules that govern the work of individuals

Team Norms

They can designate factors such as how people are expected to participate on a team, attendance at meetings, the type of language and dress that are acceptable, and the use of formal procedures

It is important to note that norms may differ in each team and that they can be dysfunctional as well as functional

Performance norms govern the amount and quality of work expected of team members

Stage of Team Development

Forming

Norming

Storming

Performing

Mourning

Adjourning

d

Resources and Support

Organizational Culture

Material and Nonmaterial Support and Recognition

Rewards

Organizational Culture

Organizational culture is the fabric of values, beliefs, assumptions, myths, norms, goals, and visions that are widely shared in the organization (French 1998)

Cultures are very difficult to change

Teams develop their own culture (or organizational subculture), including rituals, languages, particular modes of communication, and unique systems of rewards and sanctions

Organizational Culture

Effective teams are characterized by strong cultures, including interdisciplinary respect, open communication, and a collective spirit

Teams can have an appropriate culture but be enmeshed within an organization with a contrary culture; organizational cultures can be highly supportive, unsupportive, or destructive to the work of teams (Kiassi et al. (2004)

Material and Nonmaterial Support and Recognition

Effective teams require material resources including financial resources, intellectual resources, information, people with the necessary knowledge, skills and abilities, equipment, communication systems, and moral support and credibility

A team’s access to material and nonmaterial support reflects the moral support and encouragement given a team by the larger organization and senior management

Nonmaterial support includes providing team members with appropriate autonomy, feedback, a sense of meaningfulness, and a belief that their work is having a broad impact (Hackman and Oldham 1980).

Rewards

Rewards are distributed as recognition and commendation for the team’s work

In CQI, team rewards usually consist of the intrinsic satisfaction of achieving results, positive feelings created by a successful team effort

Individual rewards may be provided to team members through performance appraisal and incentive pay programs

Team Processes

Team Leadership

Communication Networks and Interaction Patterns

Decision Making

Member and Team Learning

Team Leadership

Leadership in teams is defined as the ability of individuals to influence other members toward the achievement of the team’s goals

An individual with no formal authority may emerge as a leader and influence member behavior

Various leadership models may operate in different teams, depending upon the team’s purpose

Leadership may be:

focused on one individual or

shared or

rotated among team members and

formal or

informal

Team Leadership

Leadership in relation to CQI must reflect the fact that Quality Improvement is by definition ambiguous and largely a problem-solving process

Team members are brought onto a quality improvement team because no single person has the expertise to solve a particular problem

They participate in CQI teams because they have expertise and are able to participate actively in identifying problems, analyzing causation, developing interventions, evaluating the impact of change

Communication Networks and Interaction Patterns

For CQI processes to work, communication must be effective not only within the team, but also between the team and the larger external environment, including other teams

Communication networks come in several varieties, and each situation demands a different type of communication structure:

A centralized communication structure where information passes from the team leader to other team members, or from team leader down in hierarchical manner, may be appropriate with simple tasks (note no upward communication is possible)

Communication Networks and Interaction Patterns

The network hub structure has an individual placed as the center of the communication node, and information from team members must pass through this hub in order to reach other team members

An all-channel communication structure is dense; communication lines are open and encouraged between all members of the team.

This is useful for complex situations where the work of each team member is interdependent with their colleagues.

Formal lines of authority are blurred or meaningless here

Leaders can assume boundary-spanning roles between their team and the larger organization, or other organizations, ensuring that relationships with critical outside groups are workable

Decision Making

Decision making is a task of all teams

Teams may reach decisions by consensus, voting, or team members may simply advise the team leader, leaving the final decision to the leader

There is no single best way for a team to make decisions, but rather is dependent upon the circumstances and goals of the team

However, the decisional authority of the team and that of team members needs to be specific and clear

Care needs to be taken that cohesion in a team does not develop into conformity and “group think”, where members lose their independence as free thinkers, and fear expressing views opposed to what they consider to be the team consensus

Member and Team Learning

A learning organization is one that proactively creates, acquires, and transfers knowledge and that changes its behavior on the basis of new knowledge and insights (Garvin 1993, Senge 1994)

Teams enhance their ability to learn and apply new knowledge through the use of a number of facilitating factors, including:

scanning the environment for new information;

identifying performance gaps within the team;

adopting an “experimental mindset,” such that team members are open to new approaches;

having leadership supportive of change

Member and Team Learning

Effective teams:

continuously look for new information to improve their performance

are open to new ideas and seek them out

include people on teams with new expertise and alternative perspectives

ensure that team members are engaged in continuous training and learning

use new information and ensure that new knowledge is transferred to the team

Member and Team Learning (continued)

use knowledge to change the team’s behavior in pursuit of higher levels of achievement

Effective CQI teams review their own performance, satisfaction of members, and seek to develop strategies and new team management techniques that will enhance their performance

Conclusions

Cohesive teams and effective teamwork are essential in healthcare in general and CQI processes in particular

Steps in team development and team processes include: the development of balanced team relationships; equal status to ensure participation of all team members; and open communication and feedback, ensuring efficient team performance through empowerment and high levels of motivation

Critical to the success of any team includes the role of team leaders and the importance of developing a team’s culture

Ongoing team learning is one of the most important aspects of teamwork in continuous quality improvement; providing the means for sharing knowledge and improving performance of a team as well as the larger organization in which the team exists.

Conclusions

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