Transcript

www.england.nhs.uk #PMChallengeFund @NHSEngland

Myth-bustingFive myths to challenge

Dr Robert VarnamHead of general practice development

@robertvarnam

www.england.nhs.uk

In my work over the past few years, I’ve encountered some persistent myths about general practice and change. They run quite deep and hold back a lot of potential. They don’t just affect policymakers or politicians, either – they’re often things primary care leaders believe themselves.

The Challenge Fund is a great opportunity to achieve lasting transformational change in your area. But, to make the most of that, you’re going to have to be confident in challenging five key myths.

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Myth 1: general practice is finished. Or, at least, not far off.

There are some who talk as though general practice is finished, or as near as makes no difference. Sometimes, these are people within the profession, sometimes outside.

When morale is low, it’s understandable for negative emotions to influence our assessment. But just look what happened when the government invited practices to apply for this innovation programme – nearly two thirds of the country responded! And, with very exceptions, every proposal was for worthwhile change. The team here were nearly drowned by the work of processing it all.

That’s not a part of the NHS that’s dead, lacking in energy or in ideas. We just need to give general practice the headroom for it to fulfil the enormous potential it has. The creativity, plans and energy are already there.

General practice is finished

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PM Challenge Fund57 schemes2500 practices18m patients

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Myth 2: Access is simple

We’ve been here before, launching a national programme to improve access in general practice. But I’m struck by how simplistic much of the thinking has been on previous occasions. We’ve treated access as though it stands alone as a feature of general practice. As though it’s meaningful to improve speed of making an appointment without asking who it’s with, or what kind of care they’re able to provide.

That’s clearly nonsense, and we risk providing very poor value to individual patients and taxpayers if we don’t acknowledge that access is one facet of a complex system of care.

We similarly risk thinking that every patient needs the same kind of access. Just saying it like that, it’s clearly untrue. Yet how many times have we – even you or I – been involved in a change which was about moving from one monolithic, one-size-fits-all appointment system to another?

In the first year of the Challenge Fund I was delighted to see that many schemes were actually aiming to deliver what I’ve dubbed ‘right access’ – connecting the right patient with the right person, able to give the right care in the right place at the right time. And acknowledging that it’s right for some patients not to ‘see the doctor’, just as it is for some to have much greater confidence that they will, soon.

Access is simple

Right place

Right time

Right person

Right care

Right Access

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Myth 3: if we just did this one thing…

It’s probably human nature, but ‘silver bullet’ thinking abounds in the NHS. Probably in your own team meetings. How many times, often with a sigh of frustration, does someone (maybe you) exclaim “If we just did x/y/z, it would solve this”?

Sometimes, a single change makes a massive difference. But rarely. Every one of the innovations you’re proposing is very sensible. Most have at least some evidence already. But none of them has ever been found to achieve all the improvement we need. You’re going to need several, combined.

At best, silver bullet thinking will lead you disappointed and tired. At worst, it’ll discredit the ideas you’re trying out, simply because someone allowed in the thought that just doing this one thing would achieve all your goals. It’s almost never true.

If we just …

Pre-GP

Entry to care

Opening hours

Consultation

Care model

At-

sca

le

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Myth 4: Our good ideas are all we need

When you’ve been working on a set of ideas for what changes to make to your service, it’s natural to become quite attached to them. You may have had some feelings of resentment lately as people have asked you probing questions about them, through the due diligence process.

The trouble is, the consistent experience of people leading large scale change is that 70% of efforts fail. Not just in the NHS, or in healthcare, but worldwide in every industry.

And one of the big factors causing that depressing experience is a belief that good ideas are enough. They’re not. They’re obviously necessary, but I’m afraid they’re not sufficient.

Along with the ‘WHAT’ of your change, you need the ‘HOW’. The strategies, tactics and methodologies by which you turn the good idea into a movement of people and a plan of action. If you don’t skilfully lead people, if you don’t use an effective improvement methodology, if you don’t measure right … the evidence shows you risk failing. We’ll do all we can this year to support you with the HOW of change. I’d ask you to start by commiting to have plans which combine the how and the what, and which unleash your practices’ commitment by clearly articulating the WHY (we’ll talk more about that later)

Good ideas are enough

WHAT HOWWHY

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Myth 5: failure is not an option

In the NHS, one can be led by a culture of regulation or performance management to fear failure or change. Even to be tempted to cover them up.

Is that appropriate for innovation leaders?

Do you know the significance of the number 5127? It’s the number of prototypes James Dyson had to make before his first bagless vacuum cleaner worked fully. Is that 5127 failures? Of course not, it’s 5127 steps on the way to getting a good idea to work in the real world. Eddison once said “I have not failed, I have found 10,000 ways NOT to make a lightbulb.”

If, at the end of this year, you tell us that every part of your initial plans was a fantastic success, I will conclude that you are either foolish, deluded or lying. Because they won’t be. Everyone who has ever set out with an idea about making a service better has found that some aspects of the idea work first time, and others need to be tweaked. And some of our ideas just don’t seem to work – at least not in our context or with our implementation approach. Discovering that is not a failure, it is necessary. The failure would be not to anticipate it or not to spot it.

If you encounter something that’s not working as you expected, change it. It would be an appalling waste of public money and confidence if you didn’t. Just do it with your eyes open and your brain engaged. Please don’t make decisions based solely on instinct or opinion. If you suspect something’s not working right, measure it. Make a rational, evidence based assessment.

And when you start finding things that need tweaking or possibly even stopping, please tell us as soon as possible. We really want to learn from your experience, including from failure. You should expect we’re going to ask why you think it needs changing. If we can, we may connect you with someone else who’s done something similar and had a different result, to see if that helps you or we can learn more about the conditions for success.

But failing to get every idea to work without any tweaking is not failure, it’s innovation. In fact, it’s life.

We must not fail

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www.england.nhs.uk #PMChallengeFund @NHSEngland

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