KM stuff
Ideas, learning and reflections on knowledge and evidence in healthcare
Sunday, 24 March 2013
QIPP @lert: Making health care safer
QIPP @lert: Making health care safer: The Annals of Internal Medicine have published a special edition reviewing the evidence supporting strategies to improve patient safety. Th...
Sunday, 12 August 2012
DH KM framework to support transition
This week, I went along to an NHS Midlands and East event, on the DH KM framework. The DH team have updated the framework since I last took a look, in particular the prioritisation guide. This has now been condensed to 6 questions - easier to follow than their earlier flowchart:
The questions help prioritise where to focus efforts and identify most appropriate methods for capturing knowledge and connecting people.
www.connectingforhealth.nhs.uk/systemsandservices/icd/knowledge/transition
- to what extent will the knowledge be in demand in the future
- to what extent will there be disruption in the personnel responsible for the activities?
- would the loss of this knowledge create risk to continuity or success of the function?
- is this knowledge unique?
- will the person/people be leaving soon?
- will there be a useable overlap when relevant personnel from both the sender and receiver function are in place?
The questions help prioritise where to focus efforts and identify most appropriate methods for capturing knowledge and connecting people.
www.connectingforhealth.nhs.uk/systemsandservices/icd/knowledge/transition
Saturday, 11 August 2012
"Stories are information too"
HSJ (2 August) featured an interview with Mark Davies, NHS Information Centre, where he talks about the value of stories (from patients, carers, staff) in understanding current systems and designing improvements: "Stories are information too". There's a lot in the KM literature about story telling as a way of capturing and sharing experiential knowledge and learning lessons (some links below).
Mark Davies talks more widely about the critical value of information in making evidence-based decisions, giving an example of analysis in Slough where geosocial mapping enabled teams to target areas where they suspected high numbers of patients with undiagnosed diabetes - within 6 weeks, the number of diagnosed patients increased by 285%.
He goes on to say "We have lots of data but it's lazy data. We have to make it work and turn it into actionable data - data we can do something with".
A few more resources on the value of story-telling:
Mark Davies talks more widely about the critical value of information in making evidence-based decisions, giving an example of analysis in Slough where geosocial mapping enabled teams to target areas where they suspected high numbers of patients with undiagnosed diabetes - within 6 weeks, the number of diagnosed patients increased by 285%.
He goes on to say "We have lots of data but it's lazy data. We have to make it work and turn it into actionable data - data we can do something with".
A few more resources on the value of story-telling:
- Healthtalkonline - http://www.healthtalkonline.org/ and its sister site, youthhealthtalk.org, share the experiences of over 2000 people's experiences of around 60 health-related conditions and illnesses.
- David Gurteen writes and speaks a lot about the value of conversation and story-telling - this blog post is one example http://www.gurteen.com/gurteen/gurteen.nsf/id/business-is-a-conversation-post. More insights at http://www.gurteen.com/.
- Department of Work and Pensions http://www.ikmagazine.com/xq/asp/txtSearch.learning/exactphrase.1/sid.0/articleid.CC54EE1E-55AC-4C65-9860-770D217540C9/qx/display.htm
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)