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Worldwide Complexity: Strategic Planning for a Non-Profit Healthcare Organization A "non-business" plan approach to
pursuing an international opportunity |
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Told by: Paul Plsek Illustration of:
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The
Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) is a non-profit corporation based in Boston.
IHIs mission is to "...help lead the improvement of health care systems, to
increase continuously their quality and value..." and its vision is to be
"...recognized as a premier integrative force..." IHI was founded in 1989 by
Donald M. Berwick, M.D. (the current CEO) and has grown in 8 years from a grant-funded
group of three people to a self-sustaining organization of about 30 employees with a
multi-million dollar annual budget. IHI provides courses in improvement technology, annual
conferences, publications, and so-called Breakthrough Series Improvement Projects in which
20+ health care organizations work collaboratively to generate improvements in targeted
areas (for example, reducing c-sections). I have known Don Berwick for
many years and personally played an active role in the early work of the Institute. While
I am an independent consultant in health care quality management, I have maintained my
friendship with Don and an on-going association with the Institute. While IHIs mission
statement explicitly states "...our initial focus is primarily on the health care
systems of the United States and Canada," the Institute has engaged in various
efforts in other parts of the world. IHI co-sponsors an annual European Quality Forum
along with the British Medical Association. IHI faculty have also conducted courses and
provided modest consulting help in the Middle East, Norway, Sweden, and the Netherlands.
These efforts have been largely responsive to personal requests for help from individuals
who are friends of the organizations CEO, Don Berwick. In early 1997, Don and the
organizations COO, Maureen Bisognano (another person I have known for many years),
had concluded, along with a few IHI Board members, that there was an opportunity for IHI
to expand its work internationally. The thinking at that time was that IHI had a great
deal of knowledge for improvement to offer health care organizations in other countries,
but that simply responding to requests for help from personal friends was not an effective
way to disseminate that knowledge. Preliminary ideas about potentially better ways
included setting up branch offices in other countries, establishing franchise agreements
with local organizations in other countries, and/or forming a Board of Directors in Europe
with the goal of establishing an IHI-like organization there. Maureen contacted me in February
1997 to ask if I would take on a part-time, senior leadership position at the Institute to
lead an expanded international effort. Specifically, the first task was to sort through
the variety of options and produce a business plan for the effort. I agreed to take on
this work with a commitment of 3-4 days per month over the next three years.
At around the time Maureen and I
were discussing my potential role at IHI, events were occurring in Sweden that would
eventually give us our first "test case" for an IHI international strategy.
Citizen disenchantment with long waits for healthcare services had led to a piece of
national legislation, called the Dagmar Initiative, that mandated improvements in service;
specifically, reductions in waits and delays. The Swedish healthcare service is organized
and budgeted at the county level. So, naturally, the mandate to lead the needed
improvement effort fell to the Federation of Swedish County Councils (FSCC), a group in
Stockholm that has traditionally provided guidance and knowledge resources to the various
county councils throughout the country. Several members of FSCC, notably
the Senior Director for Quality, Margareta Palmberg, had attended several improvement
courses and conferences sponsored by IHI. Palmberg is also serving as co-chair for the
European Quality Forum, co-sponsored by the IHI and the British Medical Journal. Palmberg
and her group, who had been advocating improvement methods in Sweden with modest success
for several years, suddenly found themselves in the spotlight with a politically-backed
mandate to bring about significant improvements. Palmberg e-mailed Don Berwick to tell him
what had happened and to ask for help. Don immediately noted that the IHI had just
conducted a very successful "Waits and Delays Breakthrough Series (BTS)" that
had identified several key "change concepts" that lead to significant reductions
in waiting throughout the healthcare organizations that had participated. It seemed
natural that this process might be useful to Palmberg and her group. Again, all of this was happening
at about the same time that Maureen was asking me to help develop a business plan for the
IHI international effort. The urgency of the need to organize our thinking to serve the
Swedes naturally took precedence over the desire to develop a comprehensive business plan
for international efforts.
The details of the Swedish initiative are not important here, except to note the following impressions and outcomes...
While all of this was
happening, time was marching forward. The next quarterly meeting of the IHI Board of
Directors was coming up in about six weeks. At its previous meeting, the Board had briefly
discussed the possibility of an international effort and had agreed to devote much more
time to it at the next meeting. This was the discussion that led to my being asked to come
on board to help prepare the business plan. But, clearly, we werent
going to get a traditional business plan written in such a short period of time. Instead,
I suggested that I could put together a sort of "position paper" that would
outline some preliminary thinking; enough to feed a meaty discussion at the upcoming board
meeting. Maureen thought that this would be fine.
The position paper ended up
being a four-page document. Page 1 was an overview of the current situation describing the
diverse requests for help that IHI had received from all over the world. Page 2 described
the "current opportunity;" basically, that there was a natural overlap between
the knowledge for improvement that IHI had developed over the years and the emerging
tension for change in the health systems of other countries. Page 3 proposed a set of
principles to guide IHIs work internationally. These were set up in the text as
follows: "Reflection on our interactions to date with groups outside North America
has already led us to see a set of principles that we might apply to maximize our impact
internationally and avoid distractions." These principles included (there were a few
others that would only make sense to IHI insiders, Ive deleted those for brevity
here):
Page 4 was a summary and a set of discussion questions for the Board.
Maureen liked the write-up and
the Board had a very good discussion based upon it. It helped a lot that this particular
Board meeting was in Paris just prior to the European Healthcare Quality Improvement
conference that IHI was co-sponsoring with the British Medical Journal. The board members
were keenly aware of the diversity in the various healthcare systems around the world and
how hard it was for Americans to understand all the details of what was going on in these
systems. The notion of approaching the issue of IHIs international activities with a
set of clear principles with which to judge unfolding possibilities, rather than some
semi-rigid business plan, was appealing. The Board tentatively approved
continued activity along these lines. They wanted a timeline of activities for the next
year or so and a bit more discussion about how exactly we would use these principles to
identify and act on opportunities.
The principles (minimum specs)
create the environment (container) for emergence. But, how would we know when emergence
happens? It seemed to me that the next thing to do was to dramatically increase the
information flow in this now world-wide CAS. Up to this point, the information flow was
primarily through IHIs CEO, Don Berwick; people in other countries who knew Don
would tell him about happenings within their country and ask for IHI help. Through discussions with various
insiders at IHI about the clear need to know more about what was going on around the
world, the concept of the "IHI International QI Happenings Data Base" emerged. I
generated another "position paper" about this and circulated it among IHI
insiders.
The metaphor is that of an
Internet web page. The home page would be a map of the world. Click on a country and you
can see whats happening in quality improvement there. The web page would pull
together information from three sources: healthcare demographic data bases such as those
maintained by the World Health Organization, reviews of articles in the literature written
by people outside the US describing quality improvement efforts, and e-mail inputs from
people outside the US. The third source, e-mail inputs
from people outside the US, is key. This is where the interaction among agents within this
CAS really occurs. The idea, as of this writing, is to send out an e-mail message from Don
Berwick, who is quite well known, to a large number of people internationally. The message
will briefly describe IHIs collected knowledge for improvement and then ask for help
in compiling an information resource on what is happening in quality improvement around
the world (we have a list of specific questions to stimulate thinking). Based on responses from this
initial e-mailing, we hope to establish on-going communications with many people in the
healthcare QI field around the world. By making the information public (probably as an
actual web site on the Internet) we hope to encourage input, use the dynamic of a public
forum to weed out spurious personal opinion from fact, and create a sense of a community
working toward a common purpose of improved healthcare. The idea is to gain information,
establish mutually-respecting relationships, and build a low-cost information network that
is continually updating the picture of quality improvement world wide. The position paper has
stimulated good discussion. Don, Maureen, and several other IHI insiders say, "go for
it."
In parallel with all of this,
there was still the Boards request for a timeline and a bit more detail as to how
things would go forward. I prepared a two-page addendum to the original position paper.
The addendum provided a draft vision statement for the IHI International effort, a
one-paragraph summary of the philosophy underlying our next actions, a two-year timeline,
and a list of goals two years out. The one-paragraph summary of
philosophy finally begins to reveal the complexity lens. It reads...
The timeline that follows this
provides milestones for the initial construction of the International QI Happenings Data
Base and describes a cycle by which IHI will endeavor to identify two countries per year
where emerging conditions compare favorably to the principles (minimum specs). This cycle
is tied naturally to IHIs two annual events, the US Forum in December and the
European Forum in April; points in time when information flow is particularly heightened
and focused. The timeline does not specify exactly where we will form relationships, nor
what format those relationships might take; that will emerge from the information flow in
the CAS.
The IHI Board reviewed the new
input (vision, philosophy, timeline, and goals) at its last meeting just a few weeks prior
to this writing and again tentatively approved our moving forward as outlined. Don
e-mailed me after the meeting and said that the discussion was good, most of the board is
very excited about how this is playing out, but two board members are still not completely
comfortable. He said that the discomfort was primarily around not being sure how much IHI
effort this would consume over time. He did not mention the complex adaptive systems
language I inserted in the material, and neither did I in my response back to him. We
agreed that I would work with the IHI staff who had been involved in the successful work
with Sweden to document how much IHI time and expense went into this.
This story remains a work in
progress. Ill update it as events unfold. |
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& Associates, |