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Anesthesia Education Business/Finances Clinical Tips Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#83 – Positive Deviance as a Catalyst for Change with Cherie Burke, DNP, CRNA

“Positive deviance is really about… taking those things that people are doing right and sharing them with everyone so that everyone is doing things to improve our patients’ care, our patients’ outcomes.” 

Cherie Burke, DNP, CRNA

Dr Cherie Burke joins me to unpack how positive deviance can be a catalyst for change in healthcare.

Positive deviance is all about looking for what’s going right and transferring those lessons to other opportunities, processes & providers to improve performance.

Aggressive action & investigation is the norm when something goes wrong. Think about when a sentinel event happens. There’s mandatory reporting, root cause analysis (RCAs), critical incident debriefs and a concerted effort to prevent errors & improve processes in the future. Positive deviance is a process of applying a similar degree of effort to what’s working right. Can we find the high performers, figure out what they’re doing well and transfer those techniques, processes & beliefs to other domains?

Cherie Burke, DNP, CRNA completed her Master of Science in Nursing at DeSales (duh-sales) University, her Doctorate in Nursing Practice at La Salle (la-sal) University, a post-doctoral fellowship in patient safety at the VA Medical Center in Philadelphia and is currently a PhD candidate at Duquesne (do-cane) University.

Dr Burke and I worked together at Maine Medical Center in Portland, Maine and have also taught alongside one another with Cornerstone Anesthesia Conferences. Cherie is actually who connected me with Jayme Rueter, the CRNA who founded Cornerstone and who gave me my first shot at teaching other CRNAs at continuing education conferences.

I think you’re going to enjoy this conversation… learning how to find positive deviance at play in our organizations is key for us to improve the work that we do.

This episode was originally released on From the Head of the Bed on January 26, 2016.

Resources: 

Bradley, E. H., Curry, L. A., Ramanadhan, S., Rowe, L., Nembhard, I. M., & Krumholz, H. M. (2009). Research in action: using positive deviance to improve quality of health care. Implementation science4(1), 1-11.

Ford, K. (2013). Survey of syringe and needle safety among student registered nurse anesthetists: are we making any progress?. AANA journal81(1).

Gary, J. C. (2013). Exploring the concept and use of positive deviance in nursing. AJN The American Journal of Nursing113(8), 26-34.

Lawton, R., Taylor, N., Clay-Williams, R., & Braithwaite, J. (2014). Positive deviance: a different approach to achieving patient safety. BMJ quality & safety23(11), 880-883.

Prielipp, R. C., Magro, M., Morell, R. C., & Brull, S. J. (2010). The normalization of deviance: do we (un) knowingly accept doing the wrong thing?. Anesthesia & Analgesia110(5), 1499-1502.

Rosenberg, T. (2013, February 27).  When deviants do good.  The New York Times, Retrieved from http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/27/when-deviants-do-good/?_r=0

Categories
Anesthesia Education Clinical Tips Leadership in Emergencies Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#31 – Expertise in Anesthesia with Denham Ward, MD, PhD

This episode originally released on From the Head of the Bed in February of 2017.

Denham Ward, MD, PhD joined me to talk about expertise in anesthesia. At the time of this recording, Dr Ward was the director of the Academy at Maine Medical Center Institute for Teaching Excellence and professor of anesthesiology at Tufts University School of Medicine. He is Emeritus Professor and Chair of Anesthesiology and Emeritus Professor of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Rochester.

This podcast focuses on developing and maintaining expertise over a career in anesthesia.  Highlights range from defining expertise, specialization in anesthesia, types of problem solving and clinical decision making, deliberate practice, grit and how to teach and coach the development of expertise in trainees as well as experienced clinicians. We touch on Ericsson’s ideas on deliberate practice and the 10,000 hour rule for expertise, Dreyfus’ conceptions of skill acquisition from novice-advanced beginner-competent-proficient-expert, Kahneman’s System 1 and System 2 ways of thinking, Moulton’s “when to slow down,” Gawande’s ideas on the benefit of getting coached to improve our performance even well into our careers and more.

“The difference between medicine and music is… musicians practice, practice, practice and then they go to Carnegie Hall for one evening…  We’re essentially at Carnegie Hall every day.”  Denham Ward, MD, PhD

“Most professionals reach a stable, average level of performance within a relatively short time frame and maintain this mediocre status for the rest of their careers.” Anders Ericsson

References:

Benner, P. (1982). From novice to expert.  The American Journal of Nursing, Vol. 82.  Retrieved from http://www.healthsystem.virginia.edu/pub/therapy-services/3%20-%20Benner%20-%20Novice%20to%20Expert-1.pdf.

Dreyfus HL, Dreyfus SE. (2005).  Expertise in Real World Contexts. Organization Studies, (26)5: 779-792. Retrieved from https://www.pdx.edu/sites/www.pdx.edu.unst/files/UNSTArticleDreyfus.pdf

Duckworth, A. (2016). Grit: The power of passion and perseverance (Vol. 124). New York, NY: Scribner.  Retrieved from http://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Grit/Angela-Duckworth/9781501111105. Screen shot by author.

Dweck, C. S. (2008). Mindset: The new psychology of success. Random House Digital, Inc..  Retreived from https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/44330/mindset-by-carol-s-dweck-phd/9780345472328/. Screen shot by author.

Ericsson, K. A. (2015). Acquisition and Maintenance of Medical Expertise: A Perspective From the Expert – Performance Approach With Deliberate Practice. Academic Medicine90(11), 1471. doi:10.1097/ACM.0000000000000939

Ericsson, K. A. (2004). Deliberate practice and the acquisition and maintenance of expert performance in medicine and related domains. Academic medicine, 79(10), S70-S81.

Gawande, A. (2011). Personal best. The New Yorker, (30). 44.  Retrieved from http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/10/03/personal-best.

Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, fast and slow. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Kaminski, J. (Fall, 2010). Theory applied to informatics – Novice to Expert. CJNI: Canadian Journal of Nursing Informatics, 5 (4), Editorial. Retrieved from http://cjni.net/journal/?p=967.

Moulton, C. E., Regehr, G., Mylopoulos, M., & MacRae, H. M. (2007). Slowing down when you should: a new model of expert judgment. Academic Medicine: Journal Of The Association Of American Medical Colleges82(10 Suppl), S109-S116.

Categories
Anesthesia Education

#1 – Anesthesia Guidebook Origin Story

Welcome! You made it! This is episode 1: the origin story, the backdrop, the context to who we are, where we’re from and where we are headed. Check out the podcast in your favorite player or right here on the website to hear our story, which is all about YOUR STORY!

You’re on a path to becoming an expert anesthesia provider… we’re here to help guide you.

Everything we do is designed to help you master your craft. 

Anesthesia providers hold their patients’ lives in their hands during every case. You never know when you will face crashing hemodynamics, a lost airway or a life-threatening surgical problem… and each of these emergencies can be complicated by your patients’ pathophysiology, suboptimal systems of care that surround you and/or your individual preparedness for the moment.

Anesthesia Guidebook will help you deepen your practice so that you can come through for your patients when it counts.

If you’re just starting to explore the absolutely fascinating world of anesthesia, maybe as a critical care Registered Nurse, medical student, anesthesia resident or SRNA, we have stories, guides and resources specifically designed with you in mind.

Anesthesia Guidebook is also for those seasoned providers who are looking to level up, dig deeper, stay fresh and develop new skills. We’ll bring you the latest on evidence-based medicine and emerging trends & techniques in the anesthesia community, so you can stay sharp and give your patients and students your best.

Renowned psychologist and best selling author on human performance & expertise, Anders Ericsson, has said:

“Most professionals reach a stable, average level of performance within a relatively short time frame and maintain this mediocre status for the rest of their careers.” (Ericsson, 2004)

Ericsson’s words throw down the gauntlet for anesthesia providers. And the stakes couldn’t be higher. The most vulnerable times in our patients lives often begin when we say “hello.” We have an esteemed responsibility to meet the demand for clinical expertise & assure high functioning systems of care that our patients expect, deserve and entrust their lives to.

Anesthesia Guidebook will bring you compelling stories, e-books and other resources built around pathophysiology, pharmacology, airway management, human performance and team dynamics, all tailored to the high stakes environment you work in.  Your path to becoming an expert anesthesia provider – to mastering your craft – will be the focus of everything we do.

Sources:

Ericsson, K. A. (2004). Deliberate practice and the acquisition and maintenance of expert performance in medicine and related domains. Academic medicine, 79(10), S70-S81.