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By WIHI
The podcast currently has 520 episodes available.
March 24, 2020
All quality improvement in health and health care shares the goal of standardizing best practices, and ensuring that staff have the skills, resources, and capability to reliably implement proven and better ways of delivering care. But what does it mean to innovate, improve, and solve problems at warp speed during a time of crisis? Tune in to this WIHI to hear IHI's Chief Innovation and Education Officer, Dr. Kedar Mate, talk with host Madge Kaplan about ways health care can harness innovation to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The ability of health care staff to raise concerns or report near-misses is only as strong as leadership’s willingness to listen. As Dr. Neil Baker writes, “psychological safety is quite fragile. People have a strong tendency to avoid speaking up about problems and disagreements.” Dr. Baker joined WIHI to address the necessity of honest dialogue and psychological safety in the workplace, achieved in part by better understanding and successfully navigating the power dynamics that exist in every organization.
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These days, US health systems are employing numerous efforts to address population health, but sometimes, these efforts fail to align. On this episode of WIHI, IHI’s Trissa Torres and Concord Hospital’s Vice President for Population Health, Betsey Rhynhart, discuss the Pathways to Population Health Compass to understand what it takes for a group to create a comprehensive, aligned population health strategy that unfolds over time.
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January 23, 2020
The relationship between workload and stress and the risk this poses for practitioners and patients alike need more attention. On this episode of WIHI, IHI's longtime senior safety expert Frank Federico, RPh, and James Won, PhD, talk about the field of human factors in health care, and the role that human factors can play in reducing today’s work-related stress.
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December 10, 2019
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WIHI is pleased to present a Special Edition Podcast: Creating a Culture of Continuous Improvement that Outlasts Your Leaders, featuring John Toussaint and Aravind Chandrasekaran.
We can all point to leaders who have championed improvement at our organizations, helping to move the dial and motivate many others. But too often organizations see their QI gains stall or, worse, reverse when a leader departs. Drs. Toussaint and Chandrasekaran have been studying this phenomenon and have identified evidence-based approaches that ensure a culture of improvement lasts beyond the tenure of any senior individual – and can be sustained during times of transition and succession.
This keynote was recorded on December 10, 2019, at IHI’s annual National Forum on Quality Improvement in Health Care in Orlando, Florida. The podcast is approximately one hour and six minutes; we recommend that you have the presentation slides handy for reference as you’re listening. The first person speaking is John Toussaint. “AC” refers to Aravind Chandrasekaran.
We recommend that you have the presentation slides handy for reference.
Thanks for listening to WIHI. As an organization dedicated to continuous improvement, we hope you will take a moment to give us feedback on this particular episode of WIHI. We’ll use this information to ensure we keep producing the high-value, cutting-edge conversations on health and patient care. Take the 1-minute survey here: ihi.org/PodcastSurvey.
Date: November 14, 2019
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Emergency departments (EDs) constantly handle behavioral health-related emergencies, but what if EDs were able to take a more proactive approach toward behavioral health patients, initiating treatment and better connecting individuals to optimal care?
Tune into this episode of WIHI, The Benefits of Behavioral Health in the ED, to hear about an eight-hospital system, 18-month IHI initiative, Integrating Behavioral Health in the Emergency Department and Upstream (ED and UP). With support from the Well Being Trust, the ED and UP initiative sought to improve ED culture surrounding patients with behavioral health issues, emphasizing trauma-informed care, and the need to build awareness of, and partner with, community resources. The WIHI panel highlights the importance of changing hearts and minds and practices in the ED with behavioral health patients when they’re most vulnerable, and the impact well-conceived interventions can have on patients, family members, and staff. Treating patients with the care most appropriate to their condition is of critical importance in health care, and we hope you’ll appreciate and learn from this WIHI.
As an organization dedicated to continuous improvement, we hope you will take a moment to give us feedback on this episode of WIHI. Take the 1-minute survey here: ihi.org/PodcastSurvey.
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Caregiver burnout is well documented and on the rise. To address some of the underlying issues and improve patient and provider safety, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) has developed a framework and set of recommendations known as "Joy in Work." Organizations across the country are testing how to apply the principles with encouraging results. If you want to learn how one clinical team at Michigan Medicine, spearheaded by Diane Lopez with help from Jamie Beach, has changed what was once a toxic culture in a medical unit, this episode of WIHI is for you.
IHI Joy In Work Tools and Resources:
The IHI Framework for Improving Joy in Work is the North Star for this work. Other key and helpful materials include:
Currently, IHI is gearing up for a Results-Oriented Learning Network around Joy in Work. The network will kick off in January 2020. Register here to save your spot in a free informational call with Network faculty on November 15, 2019, at 11:00 AM ET.
Looking for in-person trainings? Join us at this year’s National Forum, where Joy in Work is a featured track. (You can browse all National Forum sessions here.)
October 3, 2019
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The notion of waste in healthcare has expanded in recent years. Today, waste encompasses everything from diagnostic errors and hospital-acquired infections to EHR workarounds and staff burnout. Experts suggest this waste in the US health care system totals roughly one trillion dollars per year. And, as Derek Feeley writes in the foreword to the IHI Leadership Alliance’s Call to Action: “The most precious resources – the [health care] workforce’s time, spirit, and joy – are being unnecessarily drained by wasteful processes every day.”
So, what if this one trillion dollars could be cut in half by 2025? It’s no pipe dream if every health system doubles down. And, this episode of WIHI, Let’s Get to Work on Waste in Health Care, talks about how. Among our panelists, Helen Macfie will trace how the IHI Leadership Alliance waste workgroup arrived at its key interventions and savings calculations in the Call to Action; IHI’s Derek Feeley will share why he’s championing waste reduction in health care; and Joanna Roberts, and Kelly Logue will discuss the encouraging trajectory of current strategies in their organizations. We hope you’ll tune in.
September 19, 2019
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Jay Bhatt, DO, MPH, MPA, FACP, Senior Vice President & Chief Medical Officer, American Hospital Association; President, Health Research and Educational Trust
It’s been 20 years since the renamed National Academy of Medicine (former Institute of Medicine) first shined light on the unintended consequences of medical errors in American health care. Their report, To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System, has served as a catalyst for safety initiatives at health systems, and progress has been made on multiple fronts — from significant reductions in health care - associated infections, to an embrace of quality improvement and patient safety solutions that now encompass the entire continuum of care.
Even with this progress, obstacles to safe and reliable care persist. Systems are confronting a new payment environment, it remains difficult to sustain improvement gains, there are EHR headaches, and ongoing concerns about physician and staff burnout. These are just some of the reasons IHI convened national safety leaders and stakeholders to form the National Steering Committee for Patient Safety (NSC). Co-chaired by IHI and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), the NSC is hard at work on a new National Action Plan it expects to release in early 2020. In light of these developments, and in support of World Patient Safety Day on 9/17, we’re focusing this edition of WIHI: No Let Up on Safety, on the work of the NSC and their bold intention to re-energize the safety movement in the US with foundational safety principles and priorities.
If you’re looking to continue the conversation, join industry leaders at this year’s IHI National Forum on Quality Improvement in Health Care and attend a special interest breakfast with members of the NSC.
Date: August 8, 2019
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A significant rise in maternal deaths in the United States, especially among black women, has recently gotten a lot of public attention. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), acute events tied to childbirth are contributing to the upward trend. Experts also highlight other factors putting black women, in particular, at risk: racism and implicit bias within health care, the daily struggles of poverty, and disregard for pregnant women’s knowledge about their own bodies and potentially dangerous symptoms.
With lives at stake, we invite you to listen to this WIHI: Black Women and Maternal Care: Redesigning for Safety, Dignity, and Respect to learn more about the issues that have led to an alarming rise in maternal mortality disproportionately impacting Black women and what can be done to reverse this trend. Dr. Joia Crear-Perry, Ebony Marcelle, and Kiddada Green are among national and local leaders of organizations that are co-creating solutions and interventions with Black women all across the US to improve the quality of support and health care surrounding pregnancy and childbirth. Shannon Welch will describe how the current partnerships and learning with IHI promise to offer new and better practices to improve outcomes and save lives.
The podcast currently has 520 episodes available.