Healthcare IT NewsHealthcare IT News
TwitterFacebookLinkedInHealthcareITNews International
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Business Intelligence
    • Claims Processing
    • Data Warehousing
    • EDIS
    • Election 2012
    • Electronic Health Records
    • Enterprise Content Management
    • Enterprise Resource Planning
    • ePrescribing
    • Financial/Revenue Cycle Management
    • Health Information Exchange (HIE)
    • ICD-10
    • Meaningful Use
    • Mobile/Wireless
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Policy and Legislation
    • Privacy and Security
    • Quality and Safety
    • RIS and PACS
    • RTLS
    • Telehealth
    • Workforce Management
  • Issues
    • May 2012
    • April 2012
    • March 2012
    • February 2012
    • January 2012
    • December 2011
  • Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • On Demand Webinars
  • White Papers
  • Blog
  • Events
  • HIMSS JobMine
  • RSS
  • Press Releases
  • Slideshows
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Supplements
  • Survey Analyses
  • Newsletters
  • Advertise
  • Login
  • Register
  • SUBSCRIBE
    • Newspaper
    • Email Newsletter
Home » Blogs

  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • RSS Icon
  

The Magic Answer

November 20, 2009 | Will Weider, CIO of Ministry Health Care and Affinity Health System

Suggested Content

  • Wyoming hospital takes leap to the cloud for email
  • Game helps docs fight deadly infection
  • Long-term care providers use IT to help keep patients safe
  • Power to the people! Engaging patients to be engaged

Every good geek (and Google) knows that the answer to life and everything is 42. This is a famous line from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

But it seems like there is a more sensible magic answer: In order for things to go well, there needs to be a high level of specification.

Yes, ambiguity kills. In fact, it literally kills according to a study by Spear and Schmidhofer that was recently published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. The authors found that high performing organizations achieve results "by specifying how work is expected to proceed -who will do what for whom, with what purpose, when, where, and how- before work is actually done. Then, when anything contrary to expectations occurs, it is immediately identified as a problem."

Medication errors may be one of the most critical examples where a high level of specification is needed. But, I run into this everywhere.

This year I brought in consultant Kevin Behr to analyze our IT Operations. The single most significant finding is the IT Operations in my organization suffers because of a lack of definition.  When everyone is left to define how work gets done there is bound to be mistakes and mis-connects. Our organization needs to dedicate time to evaluating what we are doing and how it needs to be done. All work must be EXPLICITLY defined, otherwise talented people (like I am blessed with) can't achieve their full potential.

I believe my organizations do a superb job of running large and complex projects. That is because we spend so much time defining the right process, then learning from our mistakes and re-defining our methodologies.

Job descriptions are the same way. If you are not explicit about a person’s role and what they are expected to produce you should expect to get something unsatisfactory.

How many times have your interfaces gone through multiple re-writes because you did not have a high degree of specification when you started working on them?

Is this so basic that it is not worth a blog post? If so, why do I see so little definition of work or processes to a high level of specification?

Will Weider blogs regularly at Candid CIO.

Related Topics:
  • Google
  • medication errors

Reader Comments (1)Login to Post a Comment

KeithBoone says: The Answer to Life the Universe and Everything is now 119
November 24, 2009 | 5:38PM GMT

Haven't you heard, the answer's changed, and it's much better specified. See The Answer to Life the Universe and Everything

receive news by email

Most Popular

Latest Headlines
Most Popular
  • 14 Ways Social Media May Soon Change Your Doctor's Visit
  • No 'bubble' for healthcare IT, analysts say
  • 6 reasons physicians need to be on social media
  • Lawsuit seeks Allscripts CEO's removal
  • AMA calls for 2-year extension of ICD-10 deadline
  • 14 Ways Social Media May Soon Change Your Doctor's Visit
  • AMA claims it wants to delay ICD-10 implementation 2 years
  • Examining Healthcare Costs
  • Like it or not, MU is underway
  • Rethinking 'clinical transformation'
more Blog

WEBINARS AND WHITE PAPERS

  • WHITE PAPERS
    The Christ Hospital Case Study: Improving Operations and Ensuring the Best Possible Patient Care with ECM
  • UPCOMING WEBINARS
    June 6th @ 2PM ET--Healthcare Best Practices: 4 Critical IT Strategies to Avoid Data Breaches
  • UPCOMING WEBINARS
    May 22nd @ 2PM ET--A Smarter Approach to Healthcare PC Virtualization
  • WHITE PAPERS
    The Scarborough Hospital: Establishing a Document Management Strategy for EHRs
  • ON DEMAND WEBINARS
    Redefining Value and Success in Healthcare: Charting the Path to the Future
More Resources
Syndicate content

HIMSS JOBMINE

  • Biostatistician II - Saudi Aramco - Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
  • Chief Information Officer - West Virginia - InfoPartners, Inc. - West Virginia
  • IT Technical Services Director - Genesis HealthCare System - Zanesville, OH
  • VP, CLINICAL INFORMATICS - The Methodist Hospital System - Houston, TX
  • Senior Radiology Information Systems Analyst - Universal Health Services - King of Prussia, PA
more jobs

Marketplace

Follow Healthcare IT News on TwitterFan Healthcare IT News on FacebookJoin Healthcare IT News on LinkedInRSS Subscriptions
Digital EditionBlogEvents
JobsMobile SiteMobile App
 
Healthcare Finance News Government Health IT EHRWatch Healthcare Payer News HITECHWatch ICD10Watch mHIMSS PhysBizTech NHINWatch
©2012 MedTech Media Healthcare IT News is a publication of MedTech Media
Subscribe Advertise About Us Privacy Policy