Building High-Performing Teams in Anesthesia
Summary
Effective teams, including high-performing teams spanning departments, disciplines and services, are central to the development of a “culture of safety.” Hallmarks of high-performing teams include an aligned vision, complementary skills, achievable goals and metrics, participative leadership, a culture of trust and a preoccupation with failure. We present an overview of a presentation by Jeffrey S. Vender, MD, MBA, at PRACTICE MANAGEMENT? 2018 in New Orleans.
Developing a “culture of safety” as a cornerstone of healthcare delivery, including anesthesia care, depends on a commitment from leadership, a climate of trust that stresses learning over blaming—and teamwork to produce results. As anesthesia providers know, an anesthesia department needs to be a cooperative and collaborative player with other disciplines across the hospital, surgery center or health system in driving the efficiency, quality, safety and cost effectiveness of patient care, including operating room services. As a major member of the team that makes up the hospital system as a whole, anesthesia departments are finding it increasingly important to work effectively with other departments, disciplines and individuals.
Jeffrey S. Vender, MD, MBA, of North Shore Health System and the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Medicine, focused on the role of teams and teamwork in a culture of safety at the American Society of Anesthesiologists’ PRACTICE MANAGEMENT? 2018 in New Orleans, including high-performing teams in highly reliable organizations.
A group is not necessarily a team, he said. To function as teams, groups need a culture of collaboration and transparent, closely monitored metrics in which conflict (freedom to speak up and question the status quo) is encouraged and individual members feel empowered to be leaders.
Teams need a common purpose (The Why), shared performance goals, and a common approach to which members hold themselves (not others) accountable. “We often form teams by title, position, relationships,” Dr. Vender said. Instead, groups need to consider the mix of skills and traits needed to accomplish the task, whether a person is a good fit for the team, and removing someone who is not a good fit.
Effective team members communicate with one another, share openly, treat each other with respect and listen well. “We confuse teams of stars with all-star teams,” he added, referring to the defeat of the Dream Team in 1992 by the Collegians, after which Scottie Pippen remarked, “We didn’t know how to play with each other.”
“Stars usually don’t matter if they’re not part of the team,” Dr. Vender said. “Often, we get people who don’t fit, and then we don’t fix it. We just have to find the right spot on the team for the skillset that person brings to our department.”
Multidisciplinary teams, common in healthcare, can falter when members bring the different priorities and perspectives of their specialties to the table but lack a shared vision and goals. For example, a hospice doctor might be focused on palliative care, while an oncologist is focused on a cure regarding the same patient.
Interdisciplinary teams, by contrast, integrate disciplines and work together around a single shared goal, such as a consultation in which all members participate with the patient’s intimate involvement. Dr. Vender cited the historic teamwork of hundreds of Mission Control personnel in guiding the Apollo 13 back to Earth as the pinnacle of this model.
High-performing teams are formed primarily in high-reliability organizations to address specific, critical problems. Studies show these teams should be small—optimally 6-10 people. With larger groups, “you can share information, but communication can be difficult,” Dr. Vender said. Members should have a diverse range of complementary rather than redundant skillsets, and the team should have clear rules and expectations.
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