Know when to ask for help

I was thinking about the time I was teaching rappelling in the Rockies during the summer between my two years of graduate school.  The camp was for high school students of varying backgrounds and their counselors.  On more than one occasion, the person on the other end of my rope would freeze and I would have to talk them down safely.

Late in the day, a thunderstorm broke quickly over the mountain, causing the counselor on my rope to panic.  No amount of talking was going to get her to move either up or down, so it was up to me to rescue her.  I may have mentioned in a prior post that my total amount of rappelling experience was probably no more than a few more hours than hers.  Nonetheless, I went off belay, and within seconds, I was shoulder to shoulder with her.

The sky blackened, and the wind howled, raining bits of rock on us.  I remember that only after I locked her harness to mine did she begin to relax.  She needed to know that she didn’t have to go this alone, and she took comfort knowing someone was willing to help her.

That episode reminds me of a story I heard about a man who fell in a hole—if you know how this turns out, don’t tell the others.  He continues to struggle but can’t find a way out.  A CFO walks by.  When the man pleads for help the CFO writes a check and drops it in the hole.  A while later the vendor walks by—I know this isn’t the real story, but it’s my blog and I’ll tell it any way I want.  Where were we?  The vendor.  The man pleads for help and the vendor pulls out the contract, reads it, circles some obscure item in the fine print, tosses it in the hole, and walks on.

I walk by and see the man in the hole.  “What are you doing there?”  I asked.

“I fell in the hole and don’t know how to get out.”

I felt sorry for the man—I’m naturally empathetic—so I hopped into the hole.  “Why did you do that?  Now we’re both stuck.”

“I’ve been down here before” I said, “And I know the way out.”

I know that’s a little sappy and self-serving.  But before you decide it’s more comfortable to stay in the hole and hope nobody notices, why not see if there’s someone who knows the way out?

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Is it time to rethink your approach?

goatSo I’m making dinner the other night and I’m reminded of a story I heard a while back on NPR. The narrator and his wife were telling stories about their 50 year marriage, some of the funny memories they shared which helped keep them together. One of the stories the husband related was about his wife’s meatloaf. Their recipe for meatloaf was one they had learned from his wife’s mother. Over the years they had been served meatloaf at the home of his in-laws on several occasions, and on most of those occasions his wife would help her mom prepare the meatloaf. She’d mix the ingredients in a large wooden bowl; 1 pound each of ground beef and ground pork, breadcrumbs, two eggs, some milk, salt, pepper, oregano, and a small can of tomato paste. She’d knead the mixture together, shape into loaves, and place the loaves into the two one-and-a-half pound pan, discarding the leftover mixture. She would then pour a mixture of tomato paste and water, along with diced carrots and onions on top of the two loaf, and then garnish it with strips of bacon.

He went on to say that meatloaf night at home was one of his favorite dinners. His wife always prepared the dish exactly as she had learned from her mother. One day he asked her why she threw away the extra instead of cooking it all. She replied that she was simply following her mother’s recipe.  The husband said, “The reason your mom throws away part of the meatloaf is because she doesn’t own a two-pound baking pan. We have a two pound pan. You’ve been throwing it away all of these years and I’ve never known why until now.”

Therein lays the dilemma. We get so used to doing things one way that we forget to question whether there may a better way to do the same thing. Several of you have inquired as to how to incorporate some of the EHR strategy ideas in your organization, how to get out of the trap of continuing to do something the same way it’s been done, simply because that’s the way things are done. It’s difficult to be the iconoclast, someone who attacks the cherished beliefs of the organization. It is especially difficult without a methodology and an approach. Without a decent methodology, and some experience to shake things up, we’re no better off than a kitchen table amateur (KTA). A KTA, no matter how well-intentioned, won’t be able to affect change. The end results would be no better than sacrificing three goats and a chicken.

So, we’ll talk about how to define the problem, how to find a champion, and how to put together a plan to enable you to move the focus to developing a proper strategy, one that will be flexible enough to adapt to the changing requirements. But keep the goats and the chicken handy just in case this doesn’t work.

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Certification; Is it worth worrying about?

question4Below is an exchange I had on a LinkedIn discussion group regarding certification in response to a comment made by someone speaking to its intended benefit.  As I have not sought his permission to quote him here, I will just provide a link to his comment.  My thoughts are the following.

My understanding is that some vendors are certified and some aren’t. As a provider let’s say I’ve issued an RFP and I select vendor A over vendor B for the sole purpose of the fact that vendor A’s product is certified.

Now, assume I am I large provider, and that this implementation will cost at or above $100 million. Clearly, I am not going to do an ‘out-of-the-box’ installation. Hence, whatever I go live with will differ in many respects with what was certified. That being the case, what I have may now look far different from what the certifiers had in mind.

Regardless of the intent of certification, it also creates very effective artificial barriers to entry for the smaller vendors.

You write that the “hope is…” If I am a hospital CMIO or COO I can’t base my decisions on something as arbitrary as that. Reform, Certification, Meaningful Use, Standards, and interoperability may as well be written on an Etch-A-Sketch as each of these are subject to change.

You also write that the purpose is to “assure” product A will inter-operate with product B using industry standards. As though standards are not final, how can assurance be offered? If for A to get to B the record has to pass through one or more as yet to be defined RHIOs haw can assurance be assured.

I think that although the intent of certification may have some merit, when the national roll-out of EHR scales up, we will see that the time and money invested in certification could have been better spent elsewhere.

Here’s the link, http://www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&gid=130128&discussionID=7499646&commentID=6845299#commentID_6845299

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