RVD Developing Change Ideas
RVD Developing Change Ideas
RVD Developing Change Ideas
“It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the
most intelligent, but the ones most responsive to change.”
- Charles
Darwin
Generating Change Ideas
adherence to procedure
Utopia syndrome – looking for perfection due to fear for failure
(paralysis of action)
If improvement occurs, usually it is costly and not sustainable.
…
Insanity: Doing the same
thing over and over again
and expecting different
results”
Traditional Problem Solving
When facing quality challenges, practitioners often think that the cause
is obvious
The tendency is to jump in and make improvements without exploring
the situation
This increases the risk of a mismatch between the intervention and the
true cause of the quality problem
The perfect solution to the wrong problem(“Type 3” Error)
Example : Type 3 Error
Quality challenge: Very long wait times for HIV test results
Intervention: Increase number of technicians in lab, but a more
immediate problem was stock-outs and shortages of latex gloves in the
lab
So to avoid type error 3 “Every improvement project must start with a
thorough understanding of the quality issue”
idea work
E.g process map, fishbone diagram, Pareto chart, 5 WHYs, line graph, run
chart, driver diagram, literature, benchmarking, best practice, ask expert
etc
Federal Ministry of Health Health Service Quality Directorate
Logical thinking about
the current system
Logical negative (critical) thinking: finding problems to the new idea,
why it might fail
Root cause analysis - Direct, Contributing & Root Causes
Direct Cause
Directly results in the
problem
The Problem
Poor patient Contributing Cause
outcomes Part of the problem, but
not enough to cause the
problem on its own
Root Cause
If fixed, would prevent the
problem from happening
Root Cause Definition
“The most basic cause (or causes) that can reasonably be identified that
management has control to fix and, when fixed, will prevent (or
significantly reduce the likelihood of) the problem’s recurrence.”
- Paradies (2005)
Examples of Root Causes
You continue asking “Why?” until you get to what you believe to
1. Theatre was running very behind today, starting with the first
patient. Why?
2. There was a long wait for a trolley to bring them in. Why?
3. A replacement trolley had to be found. Why?
4. The original trolley's wheel was worn and had eventually
broken. Why?
5. It had not been regularly checked for wear. Why?
Root Cause: Because there is no equipment maintenance schedule.
Exercise
24
Using a Fishbone
25
Building a Fishbone Diagram
Major Cause Category Major Cause Category
Cause
Cause
Cause
Cause
Cause
Caus Caus Effect
e
Cause e Proble
Caus Caus
e e m Event
Cause Cause
Cause Cause
Major Cause Major Cause
Category Category
Effect
CAUSE
Problem
or Aim
Lack of
commitment No data analysis No privacy
improve the
institutional
delivery from
30% to 80%
Help to answer the question, What change can we make that will lead to
improvement?
Conceptualize a quality issue and generate change ideas linked to root causes
Explore systems and process mechanisms through primary and secondary
drivers
Generate theories and hypotheses about change initiatives that can lead to
improvement aim
Federal Ministry of Health Health Service Quality Directorate
Driver Diagrams: Purpose
Strategic planning and analysis tool that is updated systematically throughout an
entire project
Breaks down an aim into the drivers that contribute to and the detailed actions that
could be done to achieve the aim
Helps to focus on the cause-and-effect relationships that exist in complicated
systems
Provides a pathway for change which identifies the types of interventions that can
bring about the desired outcome
Federal Ministry of Health Health Service Quality Directorate
Driver Diagrams
Price, Promotion, People, Process, Place, Policy, Procedure & Product Surroundings, Suppliers,
Develop a driver diagram for your project. Hint: Use the fish
bone diagram you had developed to develop your driver
diagram.
THANK YOU!!