Using Co-Design to Develop a Collective Leadership Intervention for Healthcare Teams to Improve Safety Culture
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Context of the Co-Design Approach
2. Methods
2.1. Ethics
2.2. Study Context
2.3. Establishing a Co-Design Team and Member Recruitment
- Minimum of two years experiences working in healthcare.
- Working in healthcare setting and member of at least one healthcare team consistently for more than twelve months.
- Willingness to work within co-design team to meet shared goals.
- Willingness to listen to, and consider, different perspectives and opinions.
- Good verbal communication skills.
- Commitment to prepare for meetings by reading information sent in advance.
- Interest and enthusiasm in developing effective teamwork and leadership strategies.
- Willingness to share and reflect on personal experiences of team working and leadership (positives and negatives).
- Support and approval from line manager to attend workshops.
2.4. Steps in the Co-Design Process
- A systematic review to explore interventions to develop collectivistic approaches to leadership in healthcare settings
- a narrative review of safety culture in healthcare teams
- a systematic search of the literature with a realist lens on team interventions; what works for whom, in what context and why
- a study on understanding the enablers of nationally identified effective teams
- a study on understanding quality and safety performance measurement and monitoring at the healthcare team level
2.5. Structure of the Workshops
- Was the workshop worth attending?
- Do you think we are making progress?
- Do you understand how the components of today’s workshop fit with the co-design process?
- Was there any aspect of today’s workshop that worked well/did not work well?
- What is your key take home message?
- Any other comments?
3. Results
- Exploring the team values and establishing a vision and mission for the team
- Developing role clarity among team members and setting goals for the Co-Lead implementation
- Equipping the team with skills to discuss patient safety in an open and safe manner
- Developing a set of meaningful key, safety and quality indicators at the team level to help them monitor their progress
3.1. Setting Ground Rules and Structure
3.1.1. Informality, Confidentiality and Timings of the Workshops
3.1.2. Expertise of the Healthcare Staff
3.1.3. Role of the Patient Representative
3.1.4. Inputs from the Research Team and the Q&S Experts
3.1.5. Exercises and Discussions
3.1.6. Evaluation Process
3.2. The Co-Design Process
4. Discussion
4.1. Benefits of Taking a Co-Design Approach
4.2. Challenges of Taking a Co-Design Approach
4.3. Limitations of This Study
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
WS | Inputs | Exercises |
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WS1 January 2017 3 h workshop | Healthcare Team members: Presentation by team members on work of their team Health Systems Researchers: Presentation on Co-Lead research programme Presentation on Co-design as a method and the aims of the intervention and how we will evaluate it including exploring how teams currently measure team performance |
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WS2 February 2017 3 h workshop | Healthcare Team members Reflection Exercise given in advance: Please reflect on a time when you were a member of a team that did not function so well, where being on the team was a source of frustration for you. Number of question given to aid reflection. Please read the following article: Weller J, Boyd M, Cumin D. Teams, tribes and patient safety; overcoming barriers to effective teamwork in healthcare. Postgrad Med J 2014; 90:149–154. Health Systems Researchers Presentation on trust as trust came up a lot in first session as essential for team performance. | Feedback from all Co-Design team members on Reflection Exercise
Individual word association exercise before presentation and group discussion after. One different Case Study of effective team interventions given to three small groups to discuss following question in relation to each: Why do you think the intervention worked? Do you think this intervention would work in your organisation/team? What aspect do you think could be incorporated into the co-design intervention? |
WS3 March 2017 3 h workshop | Healthcare Team members Each of the teams represented were given a PowerPoint template to fill in details on their team around the following themes: How the team was formed; team membership; understanding of roles and responsibilities on the team; communication, co-ordination and collaboration across team members; leadership and decision-making; dignity, social support and trust; relationship with the wider hospital, hospital group, health service. Health Systems Researchers Presented ‘honeycomb’ format of possible intervention pieces colour coded according to the three main concepts—Collective Leadership, Team performance and Safety Culture. | Each team presented on their ‘homework’ by using the PowerPoint template. Health Systems Researchers Exercises on developing intervention to improve team roles and relationships |
WS4 April 2017 3 h workshop | Healthcare Team members Teams were given the exercise of developing an induction pack or set of headings for an induction pack to induct new people onto the team Health Systems Researchers Bringing together all the work to date from the first three workshops. Presented revised ‘honeycomb’ format of possible intervention pieces colour coded according to the three main concepts—Collective Leadership, Team performance and Safety Culture. Mapping the relationship of Co-Lead concepts (Collective Leadership, Team Performance and Safety Culture) onto Behaviours we hope to impact onto Intervention Components to change those behaviours Developing Collective Leadership Components of the Intervention | Presentation of draft and discussion on the three main concepts and how they relate to team behaviours and to the possible components of the intervention So for example: What behaviours would be witnessed / evident in a team where there was Collective Leadership? List all behaviours What intervention(s) would foster this / these behaviours? List all interventions according to the Collective Leadership behaviour they would promote. Taking a few Collective Leadership interventions and outlining those and asking the Co-design team to discuss if they would work in their team/organisation. It was felt we had covered some Team Performance interventions already but had not focused on Collective Leadership. Safety Culture it was felt could come later. “if you wanted to improve CL on your team, what would you do with your team? How would you do it and when would you do it?” |
WS5 May 2017 3 h workshop | Healthcare Team members Two teams asked to think, based on the development of the intervention to date, which parts and how they would go about implementing it with their team. They were asked to give a presentation on this at the next workshop. National Clinical Lead Q&S made a presentation on Safety Culture and different frameworks to explore patient safety, safety culture, safety measurement. Health Systems Researchers Presentation on the behaviours needed for a good Safety Culture and what types of intervention would help foster those. Measurement and Monitoring of Patient Safety framework (Vincent et al. 2013) & results of study into what data is being gathered at the team level. | One team presented a ‘roadmap’ of a possible suite of interventions they felt their team needed based on the honeycomb map. Exercise on co-designing team-level Q&S indicators “What would you like to know about team performance?” The overall structure/template for the draft intervention toolkit was presented and some sample tools. Discussion on this. Two interventions were discussed in more details: Role Clarity and Team Charter/Team induction |
WS6 June 2017 Day long workshop | Healthcare Team members Presentation on current status of Collective Leadership for Safety Culture Intervention Toolkit which included a set of ‘Foundational Components’ that each team should do and then a set of ‘Targeted Components’ that teams could pick and chose from depending on their needs and what emerged from the initial implementation of the Foundational Components. Facilitated discussion on Implementing the Intervention and the practicalities involved. Presentation on the suggested evaluation approach and scales and how each team would also select their own QPI/SPI to review and facilitated discussion on this. A discussion took place on the involvement of patient representatives in the process and how only one patient representative made the workshops. A spoken and written evaluation was carried out. The co-design team were reminded of each workshop’s activities and asked to evaluate their experience of the overall process. | Each person was asked to review:
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Workshop with Patient Reps & Advocates July 2017 | A joint presentation was made by members of the research team and the patient representative who had participated in the co-design process on both the process of designing the intervention and the intervention components that had been agreed on along with evaluation criteria. | Small group discussions on their experiences of healthcare teams in hospitals or other healthcare settings and how that team’s functioning could have been improved from a patient safety perspective (to begin identifying any gaps in the intervention toolkit). Small group discussion following presentation on Co-Lead on how team’s performance could have been improved from a Collective Leaderhsip perspective (to continue identifying any gaps in the intervention toolkit). Detailed discussion in small groups on the intervention toolkit pieces and any gaps. Group discussion on implementation and evaluation, ideas/suggestions around this and their possible role in both. |
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Background | Intervention Team/Area of Expertise |
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Staff Nurse | Acute Medicine Unit |
Doctor (Registrar) | Acute Medicine Unit |
Assistant Professor in Nursing/Researcher in Cancer Care | Cross centre cancer team Practicing Nurse—honorary clinical role |
Consultant Medical Oncologist | Cross centre cancer team |
Assistant Director of Nursing | Surgical Ward, Perioperative Directorate |
Business Manager | Surgical Ward, Perioperative Directorate |
Clinical Specialist Physiotherapist | Orthopaedic Team |
Care Co-ordinator | Community Healthcare Organisation |
Senior Occupational therapist | Community Healthcare Organisation |
Senior Physiotherapist | Community Healthcare Organisation |
Consultant Paediatrician | National Clinical Lead Quality and Safety and practicing consultant |
Renal Consultant | Consultant & Clinical Lecturer, Risk and Change Management, Medical Ethics |
Patient Representative | Identified by hospital patient liaison officer |
Patient Advocate | Patients for Patient Safety Ireland (PfPSI) |
Prof. of Health Systems | Psychology, Organisational Development, Organisational Behaviour |
Senior Research Fellow in Health Systems | Psychology, Organisational Behaviour, Human Factors/Ergonomics |
Research Fellow | Psychology, Organisational Behaviour, Implementation Science |
Strategy Development Officer | Healthcare team effectiveness, organisational strategies to promote team effectiveness, medial law |
Project Manager | Research project manager |
Research Assistant | Psychology, psychological safety |
PhD Student & hospital manager | Head of Transformation Office, Chair of Health & Social Care Professionals Directorate |
Collective Leadership for Team Performance | Collective Leadership for Safety Culture |
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© 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Ward, M.E.; De Brún, A.; Beirne, D.; Conway, C.; Cunningham, U.; English, A.; Fitzsimons, J.; Furlong, E.; Kane, Y.; Kelly, A.; et al. Using Co-Design to Develop a Collective Leadership Intervention for Healthcare Teams to Improve Safety Culture. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 1182. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061182
Ward ME, De Brún A, Beirne D, Conway C, Cunningham U, English A, Fitzsimons J, Furlong E, Kane Y, Kelly A, et al. Using Co-Design to Develop a Collective Leadership Intervention for Healthcare Teams to Improve Safety Culture. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(6):1182. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061182
Chicago/Turabian StyleWard, Marie E., Aoife De Brún, Deirdre Beirne, Clare Conway, Una Cunningham, Alan English, John Fitzsimons, Eileen Furlong, Yvonne Kane, Alan Kelly, and et al. 2018. "Using Co-Design to Develop a Collective Leadership Intervention for Healthcare Teams to Improve Safety Culture" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 6: 1182. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061182
APA StyleWard, M. E., De Brún, A., Beirne, D., Conway, C., Cunningham, U., English, A., Fitzsimons, J., Furlong, E., Kane, Y., Kelly, A., McDonnell, S., McGinley, S., Monaghan, B., Myler, A., Nolan, E., O’Donovan, R., O’Shea, M., Shuhaiber, A., & McAuliffe, E. (2018). Using Co-Design to Develop a Collective Leadership Intervention for Healthcare Teams to Improve Safety Culture. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(6), 1182. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061182