What We Will Do Together

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1 FROM BURNOUT TO JOY IN WORK IMPACT ON SAFETY AND RISK IL Risk Management Services October 5, 2017 Barbara Balik, EdD, MS, RN Aefina Partners What We Will Do Together What: Identify signals of burnout; describe joy in work; and articulate the link between burnout and joy in work to safety and patient outcomes Why: Describe the purpose for safety and risk leaders to engage others in nurturing joy in work How: Identify and create three actions steps to impact joy in work and a thriving safety culture What? 1

2 Sources of Joy What are Your Sources of Joy? Think of a time When you experienced joy in work What did it look like? What did it feel like? Use 1-2 words to describe your experience Share with colleagues near you 2

3 What Made it Joyful? Do a mini- root cause analysis with others Ask why 5 X Choose an example to share What are you doing? In your organization, have you taken action to improve joy in work? 1. Not on the radar screen 2. Some awareness, nothing underway yet 3. Just starting with a few small projects 4. Several things underway but no improvement yet 5. A well-developed plan with some improvement What is Joy in Work? 3

4 What is Joy in Work? By joy, we refer to the feeling of success and fulfillment that results from meaningful work without joy and meaning in work, the workforce cannot perform at its potential. Joy and meaning are generative and allow the best to be contributed by each individual, and the teams they comprise, towards the work of the Triple Aim every day. Intellectual, behavioral and emotional commitment to meaningful and satisfying work. Employee engagement is about how connected an employee is to the culture, mission and values of your organization and the degree to which they are enabled and inspired to participate in furthering them. Sikka R, Morath JM, Leape L. The Quadruple Aim: care, health, cost and meaning in work. BMJ Qual Saf. 2015;24: Sirota D, Klein D. The Enthusiastic Employee: How Companies Profit by Giving Workers What They Want (2nd edition). Pearson FT Press; 2013 Dimensions of Joy in Work Workload & Job Demands Efficiency & Resources Meaning in Work Organizational Culture & Values Joy in Work Social Support & Community at Work Work Life Integration Control & Flexibility Shanafelt T, Noseworthy J, Executive Leadership and Physician Well-being. Mayo Clinic Proceedings, Volume 92, Issue 1, Pages (January 2017) DOI: /j.mayocp Joy is often linked to Happiness Pleasure, engagement, meaning Those who pursue all three have the fullest lives M. Seligman The joy we feel striving after our potential S. Achor Human flourishing Aristotle 4

5 What Joy in Work is Not Something you announce Flavor of the month a project Superficial one-time actions Pizza parties Tokens not linked to purpose, e.g. thank you notes Something done to or for team members not with What Burnout Engagement Burnout Workload/Staffing Balanced vs. Overload Control/Choice Some control/choice over work or not Value match between personal and work or Disconnect Fairness Fair or Not Community Civility and camaraderie or Incivility 5

6 Burnout Burnout description Maslach Mental exhaustion and lack of emotional strength Depersonalization/cynicism and withdrawal Lack of a sense of personal effectiveness Burnout: Predictor of reported major error and malpractice suits Higher degrees of burnout associated with increased errors Maslach, C., Schaufeli, W., Leiter, M. Job Burnout. Annu. Rev. Psychol : Dyrbye, et al. Burnout Among Health Professionals. NAM.edu/Perspectives. July 5, 2017 Why Joy in Work? Why are you here? Why are you concerned about burnout? What impacts do you see? What do you anticipate as a result of burnout? 6

7 What we know Healthy work environments Work climate and associated burnout predicts: Patient and caregiver safety Clinical outcomes Patient experience Turnover IHI Framework for Improving Joy in Work Dyrbye, et al. Burnout Among Health Care Professionals: A call to explore and address this under recognized threat to safe, high-quality care. NAM.edu/Perspectives 7/5/2017. Urgency for Action 54% of physicians are burned out Prevalence grew 9% % respondents of MD survey are considering leaving practice 70% knew at least one MD who left practice due to poor morale 45% of nurses high degree of emotional exhaustion 37% of newly licensed RNs are thinking of leaving their job 13% vacancy rate for RNs Few CEOs have taken up the challenge to transform their organizations Health care work force injuries are 30x greater than other industries Shanafelt, et al. Changes in Burnout and Satisfaction With Work-Life Balance in Physicians + the General US Working Population Between Mayo Clinic Proceedings. 90;12:1600. Lucian Leape Institute Through the eyes of the workforce: creating joy, meaning and safer health care. Boston, MA: National Patient Safety Foundation. Why Work on Joy in Work? Burnout is accelerated by systemic disrespect Systemic disrespect = systems that: Waste time, energy, and goodwill Tolerate incivility Design work without involving those who do the work Healthy work environments stem from both organizational systems and personal resilience Modified from: Leape, et al. Culture of Respect. Parts 1 & 2. Academic Medicine, Vol. 87, No. 7 / July 2012, Vol. 87, No. 7 / July

8 Why Work on Joy in Work? Management s overall aim should be to create a system in which everybody may take joy in their work Dr. W. Edwards Deming Can each person answer yes to these questions every day? Am I treated with dignity and respect by everyone? Do I have what I need so I can make a contribution that gives meaning to my life? Am I recognized and thanked for what I do? *Through the Eyes of the Workforce: Creating Joy, Meaning, and Safer Healthcare, 2013, Lucian Leape Institute, NPSF Joy in Work Patient Partnerships Trust Arrives on a Tortoise and Leaves on a Horse 8

9 Psychological Safety Safety Culture Joy in Work Psychological safety People believe that no one will be: Humiliated or punished for speaking up Punished for human errors in unsafe systems; consistent with a just culture. Is a: Team characteristic not an attribute of individuals Consistent with exemplar safety environments Critical input to an effective learning system Schein E. Organizational Culture and Leadership. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass; Edmondson A. Teaming: how organizations learn, innovate, and compete in the knowledge economy. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass; Perlo J, Balik B, Swensen S, Kabcenell A, Landsman J, Feeley D. IHI Framework for Improving Joy in Work. IHI White Paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; (Available at ihi.org) Psychological safety People feel: Secure and capable of changing Free to speak up about unsafe conditions without retribution Confident that others will respond positively when they ask a question, raise a concern, seek feedback, admit a mistake, or propose an idea Raising a dissenting view is expected and respected; error reporting is welcomed Is founded on respectful interactions by everyone; disrespectful behavior is rapidly and consistently addressed Schein E. Organizational Culture and Leadership. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass; Edmondson A. Teaming: how organizations learn, innovate, and compete in the knowledge economy. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass; Perlo J, Balik B, Swensen S, Kabcenell A, Landsman J, Feeley D. IHI Framework for Improving Joy in Work. IHI White Paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; (Available at ihi.org) 9

10 Safety Culture Errors are identified and mitigated before harm occurs Systems are in place to enable staff to learn from errors and near-misses and prevent recurrence Healthcare professionals are not punished for human mistakes and held accountable for unprofessional conduct American College of Healthcare Executives and NPSF Lucian Leape Institute. Leading a Culture of Safety: A Blueprint for Success. Chicago, IL: American College of Healthcare Executives; Just Culture Framework The focus is on addressing systems issues that contribute to errors and harm All are: Held accountable for actively disregarding protocols and procedures, the reporting of errors, lapses, near-misses, and adverse events Supported when systems break down and errors occur Empowered and unafraid to voice concerns about threats to patient and workforce safety American College of Healthcare Executives and NPSF Lucian Leape Institute. Leading a Culture of Safety: A Blueprint for Success. Chicago, IL: American College of Healthcare Executives; How? 10

11 Measures Understand Current State What Measures do you currently use? Options - samples: MiniZ Survey Maslach Safety Culture Surveys Engagement Surveys Pulse Surveys LWDI/100 FTE What is yours? Compare to best industry? Joy in Work Framework A field tested guide Joy in Work Grounded in three disciplines: 1. Psychological needs of humans 2. Participative management 3. Improvement science Comprised of four steps Perlo J, Balik B, Swensen S, Kabcenell A, Landsman J, Feeley D. IHI Framework for Improving Joy in Work. IHI White Paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; (Available at ihi.org) What Leaders Do to Build Psychological Safety Be accessible and approachable Acknowledge the limits of current knowledge, frame the work accurately as complex, and show humility and fallibility Invite participation View failures as learning opportunities Use direct, clear language Set boundaries about what is acceptable behavior and hold others accountable for boundary violation Develop and sustain a just culture Edmondson A. Teaming: how organizations learn, innovate, and compete in the knowledge economy. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass; American College of Healthcare Executives and NPSF Lucian Leape Institute. Leading a Culture of Safety: A Blueprint for Success. Chicago, IL: American College of Healthcare Executives;

12 What is Your Experience? Joy in Work Framework A field tested guide Joy in Work Grounded in three disciplines: 1. Psychological needs of humans 2. Participative management 3. Improvement science Comprised of four steps Perlo J, Balik B, Swensen S, Kabcenell A, Landsman J, Feeley D. IHI Framework for Improving Joy in Work. IHI White Paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; (Available at ihi.org) Steps Leaders Take Outcome: Patient experience Organizational performance Staff burnout 4. Use improvement science to test approaches to improving joy in your organization 3. Commit to making Joy in Work a shared responsibility at all levels 2. Identify unique impediments to Joy in Work in the local context 1. Ask staff what matters to you? 12

13 First Get Ready to Ask What Matters Be clear on why you are having the conversations Assure capacity do leaders have it? Time for small tests PI skills to take action Senior leader champion who is it? Prepare for conversation use Listen to Learn Guide Listen to Learn Guide. Aefina Partners. Step #1: What Matters to You? 13

14 Step #1 Start with Bright Spots What s working now energy for change Celebrate positives Ask one: I got into healthcare because... What makes me proud to work here is... What matters to me in my work is... The most meaningful or best part of my work is... I know I make a difference when... When we are at our best, here s what it looks and feels like... Listen to Learn Guide. Aefina Partners. Step #2: Identify Impediments Pebbles in Shoe Identify impediments that sap joy Together: See them, analyze, devise solutions Builds a sense of mastery and hope Helps to meet the social and psychological needs required for people to flourish Physical and psychological safety Meaning and purpose in their work Some choice and control over their time Camaraderie with others at work Work life is fair and equitable 14

15 Step #2 Pebbles in Shoes Ask team to share: What gets in the way of what matters? What gets in the way of a good day is... What frustrates me in my day is... What pebbles in your shoe get in the way of what matters? Seek to understand not immediately fix: Help me understand what that looks like? What happened yesterday that would be an example of that? Step #2: Fix it Together Work on this together: How can we approach this together? Link to assets/bright spots What from our bright spots list would help us with this pebble? What one step can we take today/tomorrow to test? Pebbles not Boulders Step #2: Frequent Challenges What are we talking about? Aren t we busy enough? We have to fix everything If they (fill in the blank) would change, things would be better It didn t work before, it won t work now Ideas to try: Where can we start now? tests of change/day Learn by doing teach as you go Start small, fail forward fast, celebrate the small win Clear purpose everyone on the team can describe to others Act our way into new ways of thinking not the reverse 15

16 Step 3: Share Responsibility Step #3: Share Responsibility All Levels We re in this together: Organizational, leader, work unit, and individual level Impediments addressed team engagement improves and burnout recedes Individual shared responsibility: Cultivate own resiliency and engagement Step #3 Share Responsibility Some Examples: Senior leaders the boulders EHR Workload/staffing Core leaders Daily improvement Leading & teaching Performance Improvement Coaching in daily work Individuals Healthy Habits 3 Good Things 16

17 Leaders Make a Difference Leadership Dimensions My Chair/Manager: Holds career development conversations with me Inspires me to do my best Empowers me to do my job Is interested in my opinion Encourages suggestions for improvement Treats me with respect and dignity Provides helpful feedback on my performance Recognizes me for a job well done Keeps me informed about changes taking place Encourages me to develop my talents and skills Shanafelt, Menaker, Buskirk, Gorringe, Swensen. 12 Leadership Dimensions Mayo Clinic Proceedings. April 2015: 90(4); Three Good Things 17

18 2014 MidMichigan Health J. Bryan Sexton, PhD 2014 MidMichigan Health 2014 MidMichigan Health 18

19 2014 MidMichigan Health Step #4: Test Approaches Step #4: Test Approaches Use improvement science to test approaches that address impediments A brief list not limited to: Leader development in proven approaches that improve a sense of joy, meaning, and purpose; e.g. coaching Measure engagement regularly Assess effectiveness of unit leaders Support them in using best practices During rounds Assure team members feel part of something important, have clarity about roles, tools to do their job Physical safety Effective orientation and ongoing development Compassionate support practices, e.g. after a harm event 57 19

20 Step #4: Your Possible Tests Conversation with CEO - information You have an approach to improve safety, quality, and gain joy in work or reduce burnout Plan to test on a small scale Get back with results in 30 days Tap two colleagues to test 4 steps Go for stars 30 day test Senior Champion - information Small scale test Results in 30 days Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much Keller 20

21 RESOURCES Resources IHI Framework for Improving Joy in Work IHI Framework for Safe, Reliable, and Effective Care Safe-Reliable-Effective-Care.aspx Leading a Culture of Safety: A Blueprint for Success Culture of Safety quick survey: executive-development-program/pages/safety-culture- Assessment.aspx?utm_source=ihi&utm_campaign=Safety- Culture-Quiz&utm_medium=rotating-feature-1 Dyrbye, et al. Burnout Among Health Care Professionals: A call to explore and address this underrecognized threat to safe, high-quality care. NAM.edu/Perspectives 7/5/2017. Resources Understand Team Effectiveness How to Foster Psychological Safety Listen to Learn Guide. Aefina Partners. 21

22 Mini Z burnout survey sample Overall, I am satisfied with my current job: 1-5 I feel a great deal of stress because of my job: 1-5 Using your own definition of burnout, please circle one of the answers below: I enjoy my work. I have no symptoms of burnout. I am under stress, and don t always have as much energy as I did, but I don t feel burned out. I am definitely burning out and have one or more symptoms of burnout, e.g., emotional exhaustion. The symptoms of burnout that I am experiencing won t go away. I think about work frustrations a lot. I feel completely burned out. I am at the point where I may need to seek help. My control over my workload is: Sufficiency of time for documentation is: My professional values are well aligned with those of my department leaders: StepsForward: stepsforward@ama-assn.org Free downloadable materials and tools The Mini Z was developed by Dr. Mark Linzer and team at Hennepin County Medical Center, Minneapolis. Safety Joy in Work Believe Safety Joy in Work Others will respond positively when they ask a question or concern Others will respond positively when they admit a mistake Raising a dissenting view is expected Raising a dissenting view is respected Error reporting is welcomed All team members are treated equally Respectful interactions expected by everyone Disrespectful behavior is rapidly and consistently addressed no matter who No one will be humiliated or punished for speaking up Failures are learning opportunity Barbara Balik; Aefina Partners Psychological Safety - Measure How strongly do you agree or disagree: If you make a mistake on this team, it is often held against you Members of this team are able to bring up problems and tough issues People on this team sometimes reject others for being different It is safe to take a risk on this team It is difficult to ask other members of this team for help No one on this team would deliberately act in a way that undermines my efforts Working with members of this team, my unique skills and talents are valued and utilized 1 Strongly Disagree 2- Somewhat Disagree 3 Neutral 4 Somewhat Agree 5 - Strongly Agree Edmondson, A. 22

23 How to ask What Matters to You? Put up a What Matters to You Board in a common area Talk about what a good day looks like in meetings Share bright spot self-reports during huddles or team meetings Set up regular huddles, workgroups, or team meetings ask members to share what matters and bright spots Prioritization Methods 68 The Voice of the Staff e.g. Voting during a meeting or huddle Responding with stickers to a list in common area at any time Categorize some examples Those issues that we can control vs. those that require outside help Less vs. more expensive in time and other resources Is meaningful to a number of the team Can be a quick win You are equipped to start small tests of change within 24 hrs. Team members volunteer to test Leadership Dimensions Assessment My Leader Holds career development conversations with me Inspires me to do my best Empowers me to do my job Is interested in my opinion Encourages suggestions for improvement Treats me with respect and dignity Provides helpful feedback on my performance Recognizes me for a job well done Keeps me informed about changes taking place Encourages me to develop my talents and skills Yes/No/Sometime s What it looks like when it happens Modified from: Shanafelt, Menaker, Buskirk, Gorringe, Swensen. 12 Leadership Dimensions Mayo Clinic Proceedings. April 2015: 90(4);

24 Gallup 12 I know what is expected of me at work I have the materials and equipment I need to do my work right At work, I have the opportunity to do what I do best every day In the last seven days, I have received recognition or praise for doing good work My supervisor, or someone at work, seems to care about me as a person There is someone at work who encourages my development At work, my opinions seem to count The mission or purpose of my company makes me feel my job is important My associates are committed to doing quality work I have a best friend at work In the last six months, someone at work has talked to me about my progress This last year, I have had opportunities at work to learn and grow Buckingham M, Coffman C. (2005). First, Break All the Rules: What the World s Greatest Managers Do Differently. NYC: Simon Shuster Healthy Habits used by Mayo Stress Management and Resiliency Training (SMART) Program among Department of Radiology Faculty: A Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial. Sood A, Sharma V, Schroeder DR, Gorman B. Explore (NY) Nov- Dec;10(6): doi: /j.explore Epub 2014 Aug

25 IHI High-Impact Leadership Framework Where Leaders Focus Efforts Swensen S, Pugh M, McMullan C, Kabcenell A. High-Impact Leadership: Improve Care, Improve the Health of Populations, and Reduce Costs. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; Available on Critical Components for Ensuring a Joyful, Engaged Workforce Interlocking responsibilities at all levels Real Time Measurement Physical & Psychological Safety Wellness & Resilience Daily Improvement Happy Healthy Productive People Meaning & Purpose Autonomy & Control Camaraderie & Teamwork Recognition & Rewards Participative Management Perlo J, Balik B, Swensen S, Kabcenell A, Landsman J, Feeley D. IHI Framework for Improving Joy in Work. IHI White Paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; (Available at ihi.org) Critical Components for Ensuring a Joyful, Engaged Workforce Interlocking responsibilities at all levels Real Time Measurement: Contributing to regular feedback systems, radical candor in assessments Physical & Psychological Safety: Equitable environment, free from harm, Just Culture that is safe and respectful, support for the 2 nd Victim Wellness & Resilience: Health and wellness selfcare, cultivating resilience and stress management, role modeling values, system appreciation for whole person and family, understanding and appreciation for work life balance, mental health (depression and anxiety) support Daily Improvement: Employing knowledge of improvement science and critical eye to recognize opportunities to improve, regular, proactive learning from defects and successes Camaraderie & Teamwork: Commensality, social cohesion, productive teams, shared understanding, trusting relationships Wellness & Resilience Daily Improvement Real Time Measurement Camaraderie & Teamwork Participative Management Physical & Psychological Safety Happy Healthy Productive People Meaning & Purpose Recognition & Rewards Autonomy & Control Meaning & Purpose Daily work is connected to what called individuals to practice, line of site to mission/goals of the organization, constancy of purpose Autonomy & Control: Environment supports choice and flexibility in daily lives and work, thoughtful EHR implementation Recognition & Rewards: Leaders understand daily work, recognizing what team members are doing, and celebrating outcomes Participative Management: Co-production of Joy, leaders create space to hear, listen, and involve before acting. Clear communication and consensus building as a part of decision making 25

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