Transcript Title

Chapter 4
EHR Project Management:
Roles in Design and
Implementation
1
© 2007
Prerequisites for EHR Success
• Planning
– An EHR project should not be viewed solely as an IT
project
• Executive Management Support
– EHR projects are long-term, expensive undertakings
– Obtaining executive management support is a critical
prerequisite to a successful EHR
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Prerequisites for EHR Success
• Medical staff ownership
– Medical staff will be some of its primary users.
– Our healthcare environment is truly informationbased, and members of the medical staff are also
coming to that realization
• Use a physician champion
– The physician champion must understand change
management
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User Involvement
• Users include clinicians as well as
administrative, financial, and other persons who
rely on the health record to carry out their
responsibilities in support of the healthcare
facility.
• User concerns:
– Users need to understand that they are not being
replaced or required to work harder.
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Resources
• EHR design and implementation will require
resources:
– Appropriate
– Sustained
• For example, building the cost of the EHR into
another strategic project, such as building a
center of excellence or adding a new wing, links
the EHR to the organization’s strategic
initiatives.
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Project Scope and Characteristics
• Have a defined beginning and end, usually follow a
standard SDLC, and have a defined budget*
• Are a line function, though with special staffing
often through volunteerism from many parts of
organization
• Concern something new and therefore involve
uncertainty and change
• Require great attention to detail, while maintaining
the ability to see the big picture
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* EHR Projects
• EHR projects become ongoing programs
• Spiral life cycle results from many modules and
additional components being added to the core
functionality
• Precautions must be taken to keep an eye on
project milestones, budget, and goals to ensure
all components are completed
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Project versus Program
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Project Management Resources
Project Sponsor
Steering
Committee
Project Manager
CIO
Nursing
Domain Teams
Documentation
Medical Staff
Pharmacy
Ambulatory
Ancillaries
MAR
PFS
Orders
HIM
RCM
Vendor
Consultants
Temporary Staff
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EHR Steering Committee
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EHR Project Manager
• Tasks
– Supports steering committee
– Responsible for overseeing project completion
• Qualifications
– General contractor
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Understand EHR
Healthcare background
Project management
Leadership skills
– IT skills not as important as vision and leadership
– Clinical knowledge can be a plus
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HIM Checklist to be Involved
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Make yourself an expert
Help others gain expertise
Make sure you receive credit as the expert
Take on volunteer assignments
– But don’t volunteer “beneath” your goals; i.e., do
not volunteer to take minutes
• Educate – yourself, your staff, physicians,
administration, vendors, patients
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HIM Checklist
• EHRs are intended to be used at the point of
care for care delivery
• Documentation is important, but secondary to
care delivery
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Project Manager Skills
• Leadership – not necessarily “leader”
• Communication
– Listening, speaking, reading, writing
– Up, down, peers, partners
– Internal team, external vendors, internal customers, external
public
• Negotiation – reaching consensus
• Problem Solving – requires:
– Problem definition
– Decision making
• Influence – but not necessarily “POWER”
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Team Building
• There is no “I” in team!
• But there are stages of group development:
– Forming
– Storming
– Norming
– Performing
– Adjourning
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Meetings
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Project Management Standards
• Integration management
– Planning
– Change control
• Scope management
– Authorization
– Planning
• Time management
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Activity definition
Sequencing
Duration
Schedule development and
control
• Cost management
– Resource planning
– Cost estimating, budgeting, and
control
• Quality management
– Project performance
– Monitoring results
• Human resource management
– Organization
– Staff acquisition
– Team development
• Communications management
– Planning and distribution
channels
– Performance reporting
– Administrative closure
• Risk management
– Manage adverse events that may
stall or derail project
• Procurement management
– Planning solicitations
– Source selection
– Contract management
See: Project Management Institute
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Project Phases and Life Cycle
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Project Phases and Life Cycle
• Initiating processes
– Project formulation, feasibility studies, and strategic design and approval
• Planning processes
– Goals and time line parameters
• Executing processes
– Actual implementation steps
• Closing processes
– Implementation of benefits realization studies using the metrics previously
defined
• Controlling processes
– Project management functions
– Performed throughout the project’s life cycle
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Project Plan Outline
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Project charter, scope, or deliverables
Description of project approach
Work breakdown structure
Cost estimates
Start dates
Controls
Performance measurement baselines
Major milestones and target dates
Risks, constraints, assumptions, and responses to each
Open issues
Supporting detail
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Supporting Detail
• Project planning software
– Gantt chart
– Project Evaluation and Review Technology (PERT)
• Critical path
• Slack
• CQI techniques
– Balanced scorecards
– Key performance indicators
– Dashboards
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Gantt Chart
Row Numbers
Duration of
Major Task
(Activity)
Builds List of
Resources
Task Numbers
Task
Start
Task
End
Dependency
Task
Progress
Note
Milestone
(Task = 0 Days)
Task
Completed
Today
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Change Management
• Movement of organization from current state to future, more
effective state
• Classic change management strategies:
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Change Management Principles
• Positive influences
– Educating and
communicating
– Supporting learning new
skills and undertaking new
tasks
– Providing emotional
support
Classic change
management
strategies (still
widely used!)
• Potentially less
successful change tactics:
– Offering incentives to
accept change
– Using disincentives,
manipulation, or coercion
– Ignoring impact of change
and establishing
expectations that change
will occur over time no
matter what
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Reactions to change
Active support
Accept/modify
Acquiescence
Passive resistance
Active resistance
Leave taker
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Clinical and Cultural Transformation
• Clinical
transformation
– Integration of enabling
technology throughout
the redesign process
– Untethering of
information for use
when and where
needed
– Evidence based
– Sustained
organizational and
cultural change
– Transfer of knowledge
and effective
communications
• Core values for performance
excellence
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Voluntary leadership
Patient focused excellence
Organizational and personal learning
Valuing staff and partners
Agility
Focus on the future
Managing for innovation
Management by fact
Social responsibility and community
health
– Focus on results and creating value
– Systems perspective
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Roles of Participants
• IT Professionals
– Understand and are able to evaluate technical capability of both current
and proposed systems
– Challenge is to include significantly more outreach and work
effectively with end users
• e-HIM Professionals
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Perform data analysis
Ensure data quality
Support operations
Manage data flow
Oversee data sets
Serve as data brokers
Informatics
• American Medical Informatics
Association (AMIA) defines
medical informatics as a
discipline having “to do with all
aspects of understanding and
promoting the effective
organization, analysis,
management, and use of
information in health care.”
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Conclusion
• EHR project management is a critical function
and an exciting opportunity
– Yet is not for everyone
• Those who choose not to be a project manager
are valued as:
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Steering committee members
Domain team leaders
Department directors and managers
Trainers
Compliance officers
All e-HIM roles
© 2007