Providing ‘value’ in clinical supervision How an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure...

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Providing ‘value’ in clinical supervision How an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure Tracey Tay Staff Anaesthetist HNE Health Clinical Lead NSW Agency for ClinicalInnovation June 11, 2014

Transcript of Providing ‘value’ in clinical supervision How an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure...

Page 1: Providing ‘value’ in clinical supervision How an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure Tracey Tay Staff Anaesthetist HNE Health Clinical Lead NSW.

Providing ‘value’ in clinical supervision

How an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cureTracey Tay

Staff Anaesthetist HNE HealthClinical Lead NSW Agency for ClinicalInnovation

June 11, 2014

Page 2: Providing ‘value’ in clinical supervision How an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure Tracey Tay Staff Anaesthetist HNE Health Clinical Lead NSW.

Key messages

• Clinical supervision is essential work and it takes a lot of time and energy to do this well

• When a trainee is in difficulty, the longer the problems are left unaddressed, the more work is required

• Creating a healthy workplace helps to prevent problems and allows early detection of trainees in difficulty.

Page 3: Providing ‘value’ in clinical supervision How an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure Tracey Tay Staff Anaesthetist HNE Health Clinical Lead NSW.

A question of attitude…..

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Page 5: Providing ‘value’ in clinical supervision How an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure Tracey Tay Staff Anaesthetist HNE Health Clinical Lead NSW.
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A question of attitude

Difficult traineesvs

Trainees in difficulty

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Value

• Many definitions

• Prof Michael Porter, Harvard Business School• Value-Based Healthcare Delivery

• Value = patient outcomes per dollar spent

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What is ‘value’ in supervision?

• Trainee supervision outcomes per resource expended

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Trainee supervision outcomes

• For the trainee₋ Knowledge₋ Skills₋ Behaviours

• For patients and the organisation₋ Safety₋ Appropriate care₋ Efficiency₋ Timeliness₋ Patient-centred care

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What are we concerned about?

• Performance

• Conduct

• Impairment

• Grey areas ₋ Professional behaviour₋ Exam preparation₋ Motivation

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How do we measure these outcomes?How do we know if a trainee is in difficulty?

For the trainee• Exams – formative, summative• Workplace-based assessments₋ Direct observation of

procedural skills (DOPS)₋ Mini clinical evaluation exercise

(Mini-CEX)₋ Multisource feedback

• Informal discussions with the trainee or other staff

• Informal observation

For patients/organisation• Adverse events• Complaints

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Trainee in difficulty

• Rotated away on a number of occasions• Corridor and tea room conversations• “Odd behaviour”, “no insight”• Comments by nurses and other team members• 8 yrs into the program, dept decided to act• Difficult conversation• 6mth remediation program –extra supervision, extra

teaching, formal documented feedback• Trainee not reemployed

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Trainee in difficulty

• How fair was this for the trainee?

• Would there have been a different outcome if there had been early intervention?

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Early or late?

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Early or late?

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Intervening early - Coach or referee?

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Intervening early – feedback conversations

• Daily!• More likely to be specific, timely• Seek training in giving and receiving feedback• Provide a template to get everyone started

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Intervening early – a healthy workplace

• Leadership, role-modelling and being accountable₋ Heads of department₋ Supervisors of training ₋ Clinical supervisors

• Processes₋ Clear requirements/criteria for supervision₋ Rostering for appropriate supervision₋ Workload/hours of work

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Intervening early – a healthy workplace

• Support structures/people/processes₋ Orientation₋ Peer support/buddy systems₋ Mentors₋ Agreed ‘above and below the line’ behaviours₋ Support for ‘speaking up’₋ Training₋ Early access to specialist help

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Intervening early – a healthy workplace

A plea for kindness and compassion

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Best ‘value’ in supervision is early intervention

• Spend time and effort to create a healthy environment

• Make giving and receiving feedback an ‘everyday’ thing

• Don’t wait for trainees to make a mistake before you intervene

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Remind yourself, if things aren’t going well, this is a person in difficulty NOT a

difficult person