Monday at HIMSS, IT leaders from Houston Methodist (HM) suggested performing a common EHR transition at a large health care system in an uncommon way: relying on their core values to inspire not only employees — but the contractors too.
The seven-hospital system, with a total of 135 locations, commenced its go-live in early 2016 and is two-thirds of the way through the complete transition. In fact, three community hospitals converted to the new EHR just three days prior to HIMSS.
However, the real story at HM is how the organization put its core organizational values to work. This is easy to say and hard to do, as command and control leadership, rather than inspirational servant leadership, is still the rule in hospitals.
Penny Black, Clinical Systems Architect at HM, built her entire presentation around the systems' ICARE core values:
- Integrity: We are honest and ethical in all we say and do.
- Compassion: We embrace the whole person and respond to emotional, ethical and spiritual concerns as well as physical needs.
- Accountability: We hold ourselves accountable for our actions.
- Respect: We treat every individual as a person of worth, dignity and value.
- Excellence: We strive to be the best at what we do and a model for others to emulate.
“Culture is critical and ingrained in the fabric of HM,” Black told HCB News. “Our annual reviews are built around our values and their measurable behaviors.”
For example, at the beginning of the EHR conversion, when extra IT was being hired to gear up, each IT employee received a letter from the hospital CEO promising that when the conversion would be complete, they would not be laid off. They would, the letter read, have a place at HM as long as they performed according to the organization’s measurable values.
This courtesy also extended to the large contractor workforce, according to Black.
Alan Perkins, a principal at the Claritis Group who was hired to be a consulting associate vice president for IT, and Black’s supervisor for nearly three years (“a partnership” said Perkins), also was reverent of the HM culture. He too attributed the successful EHR conversion to the core value drivers.
While all hospitals have stated core values, in most, these are a passing curiosity, rather than a living, working document. The values were evident throughout the presentation.
“One day I got to make phone calls to contractors advising them that they had a year contract, but they were expected to take three weeks vacation (paid). Those were fun calls to make,” she recalled.
She and Perkins also recommended retention bonuses for IT staff tied to measurable performance metrics.
It was evident that the focus was on keeping their workforce satisfied, despite the fact that some were required to work 12-hour shifts. To accomplish this, they solicited employee input (another sign of good workplace culture and servant leadership) and made several changes. This included teaching employees new skills, celebrating successes and shifting the primary call pager responsibility to contractors so the analysts could focus on the conversion.
“I had one employee who was near retirement age tell me that he didn’t think he wanted to work as hard as the conversion would require,” Black said. “But when he saw how smooth the process was going, and he heard from his colleagues how well the conversion was going, he returned. He’s now nearly finished his certification on the new system.”
In the end, the conversion — while a lot of work — has nearly been achieved with no major complications.
“Be true to your organization’s values and be transparent,” advised Perkins.
In keeping with HIMSS rules on speaker endorsements, the old EHR and the replacement were not identified.