We Don't Argue With The Data
Will Jones
President/CEO @ THOMPSON Child & Family Focus | Strategic + Thought Leadership
By Hannah Dunham, Chief Performance & Quality Officer
Fundamental Belief: “We Don’t Argue With The Data”
I’ve been with Thompson a little over 4 years now working in the PQI department and there have been many changes to our data reporting. For example, we used to use Excel spreadsheets that one person would take weeks to compile, including program quality metrics, employee data, and finance data. Manually crunching numbers, it was a nightmare! After multiple reviews to ensure its accuracy, leaders would wait on this data report and then critique it. Some would even argue the integrity of it.
One thing we’ve worked hard to do at Thompson is to make data more accessible, more real time, and easier to analyze. Data Integrity is always a focus. No one wants bad data! We purchased a Business Intelligence tool, Tableau, to build dashboards for leaders to use which had the ability to drill down data to the individual level in the dashboard. We transitioned to a new EHR (EchoVantage) that Tableau could directly connect to - that also had better reporting capabilities. In addition, we began partnering with Aimpoint Digital (a data science firm) to make our dashboards even more sophisticated for the end user.
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These enhancements to our data reporting systems have improved our data integrity. But good data going out is only as good as the data coming in. Over the years and even with past companies, I’ve had conversations with leaders arguing their data. They would say things like their data isn’t right or the data doesn’t look good so I think we should change our tool or frequency to make the data look better. Some leaders have even become defensive when presenting their data because they do not believe it. This mindset is neither helpful nor solution oriented. At Thompson, we strive to be a data-informed culture which means we need to see our data as a helpful tool in achieving our goals. If the reports and dashboards are not helpful to you and your program, let us know. We will help you build a report that is helpful. Let’s not dismiss it or de-value it.
What do Thompson leaders do with their data instead of arguing about it? These things…
I hope this email makes sense to you and helps you understand our Thompson culture as it pertains to how we look at data. We don’t argue with the data; instead, we value it and use it to promote quality amongst ourselves and the children and families we serve.
Ooooh, we're going to quote you on that. Thanks for sharing, Will, and much gratitude to Hannah Dunham for laying out the vision on this. ??
Chief Behavioral Health & Addictions Officer | Peer Recovery Specialist | Social Entrepreneur
2 年Thanks for sharing, this is so important. Don’t manipulate data to make it look good to donors and accrediting bodies. If data is showing poor outcomes, use that data to drive Continuous Quality Improvment (CQI) and turn them around through quality programs/products. Use data to promote a culture of practice-based and performance-based learning. Don’t try to hide and/or manipulate them.