Corporate Education Group

Mindset and Toolsets for Problem-Solving in Healthcare

CEG offers Corporate Training and Consulting, as well as traditional and virtual instructor-led courses in management and leadership, project management, business analysis, business process management, agile/scrum, and lean six sigma.

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find the most likely factor(s) is to facilitate root cause analysis. It is so much easier to fix a problem when you truly know the root cause(s). So many lead- ers still opt for the trial-and-error method of problem solving, which often results in fixing just a symptom. Symptoms are like weeds: not getting them out at the root means the problem will reoccur. I once had a leader tell a conference room full of managers that "done is better than right." He truly believed that we needed to prioritize speed of solution over accuracy and circle back to fix whatever didn't work. Really? If we don't have time to do it right, when will we ever find the time to do it again? This mindset only works if you have lots of time and money to waste and the risk is minimal. I've never worked in that type of environment. When you reach the Improve phase of DMAIC, you are ready to generate solutions to the problem. Albert Einstein once said, "The significant prob- lems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them." This is where critical thinking techniques come in. We need to shift our thinking with variations of brainstorming, such as Random Word, Morphological Box, or Reverse Thinking. These are all tech- niques designed to see a problem through a fresh perspective. One of my favorites is Reverse Thinking. This is where a team of individuals spends a set amount of time (usually 10 minutes) discussing how the problem could get worse before allowing their minds to identify solutions. This technique creates a shift in thinking away from those top-of-mind solutions that Ein- stein speaks about. You'll be surprised at how this opens your mind to new thinking and generates better, more thorough solutions. The last phase of DMAIC is the Control phase, and it primarily deals with change management. As it turns out, we humans aren't too good with change. We might want it in theory, but our habits get in the way. This phase deals with some necessary steps to sustain the gains made by solving a problem. Without this phase, many of the problems return, thanks to the tendency of those who need to sustain the solution reverting to what they have done before. A wise man named Theodore Roosevelt once said, "In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing." Problem solv- ers need the confidence that comes with a mindset and toolset that helps identify the right thing to do. Organizations need problem solvers that know how to find that right thing and implement it. Improvement opportunities are everywhere in healthcare. You just need to train employees how to find them without ever pointing a finger at anyone. 3 0 0 B R I C K S T O N E S Q U A R E • S U I T E 2 0 1 • A N D O V E R , M A 0 1 8 1 0 | P H O N E : 9 7 8 . 6 4 9 . 8 2 0 0 | W W W . C O R P E D G R O U P . C O M M I N D S E T A N D T O O L S E T S F O R P R O B L E M - S O L V I N G I N H E A L T H C A R E In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing. Theodore Roosevelt

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