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1
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Project
Vision, Objectives, & Goals
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This
task will crystallize the vision of a
resident directed model of care.
Objectives and Goals will be set to
achieve that vision. The vision
will include a statement in story form
of what we hope to achieve. This will
provide a framework upon which the rest
of the project will be built
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A first person
“story” written in present tense
that describes the community experience
in vivid detail.
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A written
description of the project with an
outline of basic elements
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A project
charter that outlines the project
Vision, Objectives and Goals.
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A written
description of the project
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The written
description of project will be a
tool to communicate the vision, objects
and goals of resident directed approach
to care
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A compelling
description of the environment drawn
from testimony of residents and staff.
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The
environment evokes an emotion that is
reminiscent of home.
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The
environment conveys a sense of warmth
and charm that feels like home.
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The approach
to care story fosters choice,
independence, and dignity for the
individual.
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Is a task
force for change organized that has
broad representing all the views within
the community (Resident, Family, Staff,
Governance, Community)
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Is the vision
drawn from the active involvement of
residents and staff of the community?
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Is the vision
descriptive of the environment and
approach to care that is desired?
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Does the
vision paint a picture of how the
environment will look, sound, smell, and
feel?
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Do the
Resident Community, Administration and
Board of Directors agree on the written
description of the project?
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Does
Administration and Board understand the
plan?
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Does plan
agree with the philosophy of the
Creating Home & Building Community
Culture Change Initiative?
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Is the written
description clear and easy to
understand?
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2
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Engagement
of Residents, Staff & Community
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In
order for this concept change to be
accepted and sustainable, it is
important for residents and staff to
understand and buy into the concept.
Beyond this staff must believe that this
is will improve the lives of our
residents and improve the working
environment. The community
also must be included in this discussion
as their understanding, assistance and
support are necessary for long-term
success.
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Formation of
Resident & Staff Steering Committee.
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Presentation
made at a Resident Council meeting
allowing input and discussion of the
concept.
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Presentation
to the staff allowing input and
discussion. Emphasis to be put on
the importance of their input and
designing of systems through the Rapid
Cycle process.
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Presentations
made to family members and the public
outlining the plan and introducing the
concept of resident directed care.
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Make written
plan available to all interested parties
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Creation of a
system for collecting comments,
concerns, and ideas
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Buy-in of
Residents and collections comments,
concerns and ideas.
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Buy-in of
Staff and collection of comments,
concerns, and ideas.
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Buy-in of
Community and collection of comments,
concerns and ideas.
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Active
involvement of Residents & Staff in
the process.
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Has a system
been put in place to collect comments,
concerns, and ideas?
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Do residents
understand and agree with the concept of
resident directed care? (survey)
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Do Staff
understand and agree with the concept of
resident directed care? (survey)
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Does the
Community participants understand
and agree with the concept of resident
directed care
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3
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Baseline
assessment/Select Metrics
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Create
a measuring tool and baseline to assist
in fostering resident centered care
principles. This will include the
creation of ongoing reports to assess
reversal in functional decline among our
residents, using national indicators.
We will also measure changes in resident
quality of life, staff satisfaction,
family satisfaction and costs of daily
operation.
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Identify
metrics to measure
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Decide on how
metrics will be measured and/or tracked.
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Determine
baseline numbers.
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Creation of a
system for gathering data
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Data
Collection System is in place.
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Forms are
created to collect data.
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Ongoing
reports are designed.
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Baseline
numbers are recorded.
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Do the metrics
relate to the vision, objectives &
goals listed in Task 1?
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Are we using
national indicators to assess reversal
in functional decline?
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Do the metrics
measure Staff & Resident
satisfaction in addition to other more
standard measures?
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Will the
measures chosen allow us to measure
improvement against a “self best”
benchmark, with the goal of showing
marked improvement against a baseline?
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Are the
metrics measurable?
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Are the
metrics actionable?
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Is the data
collection system manageable &
sustainable?
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Are the
reports easy to understand?
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Do the reports
tell you what you need to know?
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4
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Site
Visit – Commissioners
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The
Board of Commissioners will do a site
visit to Providence Health System in
Seattle, Washington. Providence
has successfully transformed itself from
a traditional skilled nursing home with
215 beds to a resident directed approach
with 10 neighborhoods of 20-24
residents. They have implemented a
decentralized management system with an
emphasis on teamwork and job role
flexibility.
The
purpose of this visit is to give
commissioners a first hand view of what
resident directed care looks like.
This will help to achieve greater buy-in
and commitment to the process as well as
generate ideas that can be implemented
at Garfield.
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Creation of a
form to gather thoughts, ideas, and
questions for use on Site Visit
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Site visit
will occur
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Site visit
form will be used to gather information,
ideas and comments.
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Board of
Commissioners will have a greater
appreciation and understanding of
resident directed care
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Board of
Commissioners will have a greater
engagement in the change process.
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Board of
Commissioners will generate ideas that
can be implemented at Garfield.
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Gathering of
information on Site visit.
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Create a
“Diary” of choices and observations
that discusses how we negotiate the
change process and articulate the
vision?
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Are
commissioners better able to articulate
what resident directed care is?
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Do
commissioners understand the scope of
changes that must take place to
implement a resident directed model of
care?
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Were ideas and
concerns gathered from commissioners
regarding the resident directed model of
care?
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Is there a
feed-back loop to the leadership of the
organization from residents and staff?
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Does the
Organizations leadership believe in the
vision for the project?
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5
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Site
Visit – Staff & Residents
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Staff
in teams of 4-6 people will do site
visit of Providence Health System in
Seattle, Washington. The
management team and process leaders
(from all functional areas within the
organization) and resident
representatives will be selected to
attend site visits..
The
purpose of these visits is to give staff
and resident representatives a first
hand view of what resident directed care
looks like. This will help to
achieve greater buy-in and commitment to
the process. This will give
residents & staff a chance to ask
questions, address concerns, and
generate ideas about implementing this
change in their work environment.
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Site visits
will occur over a 4-5 week time period.
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Site visit
form will be used to gather information,
ideas and comments.
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Residents
& Staff will have a greater
appreciation and understanding of
resident directed care
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Residents
& Staff will have a greater
ownership of the change process.
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Residents
& Staff will generate ideas that can
be implemented at Garfield.
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Gathering of
information on Site visit.
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Is staff
better able to articulate what resident
directed care is?
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Does staff
understand the scope of changes that
must take place to implement a resident
directed model of care?
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Were ideas and
concerns gathered from staff regarding
the implementation of the resident
directed model of care?
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If a resident
is unable to participate is a resident
and/or family proxy provided?
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6
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Implement Rapid Cycle Staff Training
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Intensive
education and learning by doing.
All organization levels learn together.
Team implementation of rapid turning
Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles.
Creation of a spirit of improvement
throughout the organization.
Analysis, visioning and implementation
during the process to achieve
significant improvement across multiple
indicators. Team takes ownership
of improvements.
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Rapid Cycle
training module is created.
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Presentation
to staff of Rapid Cycle reasoning and
methodology.
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Managers are
able to answer staff questions regarding
rapid cycle.
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Rapid Cycle
Training Module is available to train
staff now and ongoing.
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Staff
understands and has a working knowledge
of the Rapid Cycle process.
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Is the Rapid
Cycle Training Module an effective tool?
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Does staff
have a working knowledge of Rapid Cycle?
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Does staff
understand how and why Rapid Cycle will
be used to implement the change to
resident directed care model?
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7
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Select
Theme – Living Environment
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A
theme for the environment will be drawn
from the vision in Step 1. This
theme will support the “story” of
our vision. Decorating is what makes a
house a home. By selecting and
agreeing upon a decorating theme, the
residents, staff , Board and community
can have a starting point for how the
“home” will look when all of the
pieces to the resident centered care
puzzle are put together.
A
theme will help to keep the architect
and decorator on the same page as the
administration, staff and residents.
By giving all parties a visual idea of
what the physical plant will look like
will greatly assist successfully
creating the look and feel of
“home”.
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Steering
committee will select and recommend
theme to Board of Commissioners.
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Recommended
theme will be presented to Staff,
Residents, and Community in the form of
a discussion, asking for input,
concerns, ideas and fit with community
values/lifestyle
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A final theme
will be decided upon.
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Selection of
an architect and decorator and
communicate the vision, objectives,
goals, and outcomes of this project.
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A final theme
will be decided upon with input of
residents, staff, and community.
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Architect has
been selected.
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A decorator
has been selected.
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Architect and
decorator are able to communicate
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resident
approach to care
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project
vision, objectives and goals
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decoration
theme
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Has a theme
been selected and agreed upon? Are
there any dissenters?
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Is the theme
workable within budget, building and
vision constraints?
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Is the Story
presented in a visual and written
fashion (Big Print posted on the wall)?
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Can the story
be articulated by all the participants
with some measure of detail?
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Are people
“telling the story”, casting the
vision?
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Do the
Architect and Decorator understand the
project and overall goals?
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Is the design
realistic given operational, regulatory
and budgetary guidelines?
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8
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Rapid
Cycle – Work Environment
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Using
the Rapid Cycle approach to managing
change within an organization the staff
will look at the changes needed to
implement a resident centered care
approach.
The
Staff will examine all aspects of the
work environment including tasks,
delegation of duties, impact on other
departments, changes needed to the
physical plant to implement these
changes and any other issues that may
surface during the process.
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Team of staff
members will be selected to work through
the Rapid Cycle Process.
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A written plan
of action will be created outlining the
changes needed to the work environment.
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Changes needed
to the physical plant will be forwarded
to the team working on task 11, Design
– Environment of Care.
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Ideas
generated regarding approach to care and
environment of care will be forwarded to
teams working in those areas.
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A written plan
of action will be created.
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Creation of a
system for evaluating ideas.
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Encourage
& reward creativity.
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Review every
idea.
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Let the
criteria be the judge.
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Are the plans
feasible?
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Do the plans
implement ideals of resident centered
care?
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Which of these
ideas are based on proven practices of
other service providers?
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Which of these
ideas are innovative?
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Were there
ideas generated that were not accepted
as part of the final plan? Please
list for possible later inclusion.
Why were these not included?
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Using a Plan,
Do, Study, Act process are we
implementing plans without delay where
we can?
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The
organization is not caught in the
“perpetual planning” trap.
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The bias is
toward immediate action.
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9
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Rapid
Cycle – Approach to Care
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Using
the Rapid Cycle approach to managing
change within an organization the staff
will look at the changes needed to
implement a resident centered care
approach
The
Staff will examine all aspects of their
approach to care utilizing the basics of
resident centered care,
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Discovery
process with residents to solicit wants
and needs.
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Teams of staff
members will be encouraged to work
through the Rapid Cycle Process.
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A written plan
of action will be created outlining the
changes needed regarding the approach to
care
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Changes needed
to the physical plant will be forwarded
to the team working on task 11, Design
– Environment of Care.
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Ideas
generated regarding environment of care
will be forwarded to teams working in
that area.
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Draft vision
of care
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A written plan
of action will be created.
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Changes that
can be implemented now will be
implemented
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Use multiple
PDSA cycles to implement and evaluate
change.
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Are the plans
feasible?
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Do the plans
implement ideals of resident centered
care?
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Which of these
ideas are based on proven practices of
other service providers?
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Which of these
ideas are innovative?
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Were there
ideas generated that were not accepted
as part of the final plan? Please
list for possible later inclusion.
Why were these not included?
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10
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Rapid
Cycle – Environment of Care
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Using
the Rapid Cycle approach to managing
change within an organization the staff
will look at the changes needed to
implement a resident centered care
approach
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Discovery
process with residents to solicit wants
and needs.
·
Team of staff
members will be encouraged to work
through the Rapid Cycle Process.
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A written plan
of action will be created outlining the
changes needed regarding the environment
of care.
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Changes needed
to the physical plant will be forwarded
to the team working on task 11, Design
– Environment of Care.
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A written plan
of action will be created.
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Score and
prioritize action points.
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Changes that
can be implemented now will be
implemented
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Are the plans
feasible?
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Do the plans
implement ideals of resident centered
care?
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Which of these
ideas are based on proven practices of
other service providers?
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Which of these
ideas are innovative?
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Were there
ideas generated that were not accepted
as part of the final plan? Please
list for possible later inclusion.
Why were these not included?
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11
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Design
– Environment of Care
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A
team of residents and staff members will
take the plans of the rapid cycle teams
and integrate them into a design plan
with the help of the architect and
decorator.
All
plans are measured against the vision in
step 1.
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Plans from
tasks 8,9,10 will be gathered as well as
their lists of changes needed to the
physical plant.
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A design plan
will be created utilizing the rapid
cycle plans.
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The final
design will be brought before all staff
and residents involved in the rapid
cycle planning process to discuss
recommendations not included in the
design and deal with any discrepancies
that this may cause.
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The final
design plan will be presented to the
board of commissioners & community.
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A final design
plan will be completed.
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The final
design plan will be approved by the
Board of commissioners.
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Is the plan
feasible?
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Is the plan
within budget constraints, if not how
will this be handled?
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Are the ideals
of resident centered care incorporated
in the plan?
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Are any rapid
cycle recommendations which were
incompatible or recommended items not
included resolved to the satisfaction of
the involved team?
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Are there any
negatives or downsides to the accepted
plan?
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Were there any
plans or design elements considered but
not implemented?
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12
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Develop
“Caring Touch” Standards
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A
team of staff members will create our
“Caring Touch” Standards.
They
will use the plans created by the Rapid
Cycle teams, learning sessions and
information evidenced by best practices
in residential care and skilled
environments to create the “Caring
Touch” Standards.
The
“Caring Touch” Standards will
articulate our specific approaches to
creating a resident centered approach
and environment of care. These
standards will be posted within our
facility, and used as a tool to
communicate this approach to Residents,
Staff, and the Community.
They
will be a foundation upon which we build
our staff training and run our
organization.
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A team will
create an initial list of “Caring
Touch Standards”
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Residents,
Staff, and Community will have a chance
to make comments and revisions
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Board will
adopt final “Caring Touch Standards”
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Board will
adopt final “Caring Touch” Standards
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A matrix will
be developed to measure the extent to
which the standards address OBRA and
state regulatory issues.
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Conflicting
standards will be discussed with the
enforcing agencies and resolution
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