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Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018 1

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Page 1: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Leading Through Change

Shannon Studden

Program Specialist II

July 18, 2018

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Page 2: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Rural Health Innovations’ Purpose

Rural Health Innovations (RHI), LLC, is a subsidiary of

the National Rural Health Resource Center (The Center),

a non-profit organization. Together, RHI and The Center

are the nation’s leading technical assistance and

knowledge centers in rural health. In partnership with

The Center, RHI connects rural health organizations with

innovations that enhance the health of rural

communities.

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Page 3: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Upcoming Initiatives

• Create a culture of learning

• Develop capacity of local EMS to deliver classes

• Develop capacity of hospital Laboratory

departments to provide hands-on components

of MLT/MT curriculum

• Expand relationships with health care facilities

• Create/expand local or regional health care

academy

• Create a Workforce Development Committee

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Page 4: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

More Upcoming Initiatives

• Identify services that will be discontinued

following grant period

• Promote collaboration between entities that are

competitors

• Hand off leadership of stakeholder group

• Develop a pilot program to provide

transportation to health care appointments

• Find solutions to barriers that arose during

grant period

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Page 5: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

You Know How!

• Created a Bachelor’s degree program

• Built relationships with academic institutions

• Built relationships with health care facilities

• Increased awareness of Allied Health disciplines

• Convinced educational partners to expand

programs to rural sites

• Collaborated with local community college to

expand high school health care career academies

• Convinced employers and job seekers to use

website for employment (ruralhires.org)

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Page 6: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

You Really Do Know How!

• Broadened scope of traditional health care

network participants

• Educated 229 people on EMS-related topics

• Increased number of EMT students passing

the state exam

• Implemented CHW training program

• Created Health Care Academy offering

CE/CME to rural health care organizations

• Implemented school-based health center

management

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Page 7: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Questions We’ll Answer

• Why do people react differently to change?

• How can we help others navigate the change

process?

• How can we manage our own emotions during

the change process?

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Page 8: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Rider vs Elephant

Rider: Rational

Elephant: Emotional

Jonathan Haidt, The Happiness HypothesisChip and Dan Heath, Switch

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Page 9: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Recent Research on Emotion

Clinical Decision Making

Providers’ clinical decisions are influenced by their own emotions, particularly anxiety, stress, fear, and denial (Kozlowski et al.)

Behavioral Economics

When we’re feeling sad, we’ll pay higher prices than when we’re feeling disgusted (Lerner et al.)

Emotional Contagion

Nurses implementing a Shared Governance initiative “caught” emotions from their colleagues, influencing perceptions of the intended change (Bartunek et al.)

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Page 10: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Change Curve

Kubler-Ross, E., 196910

Page 11: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

The Journey Through Grief

The Journey Through Grief: Insights from a Qualitative Study of Electronic Health Record Implementation

Scheck McAlearney et al., 201511

Page 12: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Change Curve: Denial

“It’s probably been one of the most unsettling things I’ve seen for physicians throughout our entire system.”

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

Denial

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Page 13: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Change Curve: Anger

“By the time you’ve actually done all that, your patient encounter is halfway over.”

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

Anger

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Page 14: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Change Curve: Bargaining

“Why do we need a cover letter? Isn’t it enough if I add a progress note?”

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

Bargaining

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Page 15: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Change Curve: Depression / Trap Door

“The first two weeks, I could have quit medicine.”

Trap

door of

despair

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

Depression

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Page 16: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Change Curve: Acceptance

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Acceptance

“I have all I need at my fingertips. I think it’s a great system.”

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

Page 17: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Why do people react differently to change?

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Page 18: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Reasons for Different Responses to Change

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Page 19: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Difference in Circumstances

• Input during the change process

• Understanding

• Nature of the change

• Impact of the change

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Page 20: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Areas of Impact

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Technical: Resources & Knowledge

Does the organization have the technical resources

I need? Do I know enough?

Political: Power & Influence

How much power will I have to affect my

environment?

Cultural: Values, Norms, Mindsets

What’s important to me? How are things normally

done around here?

Tichy, 1982

Page 21: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Differences in Personal Characteristics

• Experience with the topic

• Openness to experience

• Comfort with ambiguity

• Anxiety

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Page 22: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

How can we help others

navigate the change process?

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Page 23: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Appeal to the Rider and Elephant

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Riders without

elephants: Understanding

without motivation

Elephants without

riders: Passion without

direction

Page 24: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Denial

• Manage expectations (“the party’s over”)

• Make the case for quality

• Communicate the vision

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

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Denial

Page 25: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Anger

• Acknowledge difficulties and affirm support

• Communicate the vision

• Form a coalition or find a champion

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

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Anger

Page 26: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Bargaining

• Listen to and implement suggestions

• Acknowledge competing priorities

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

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Bargaining

Page 27: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Depression

• Allow time to adapt

• Reiterate support

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

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Depression

Page 28: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Acceptance

• Reaffirm positive statements

• Continue to ask for input

Scheck McAlearney et al., 2015

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Acceptance

Page 29: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Addressing T, P, and C

29 Tichy, 1982

Page 30: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Addressing Personal Characteristics

Less experience

• Time to absorb and adapt

• Direct support

Less comfort with ambiguity, higher anxiety

• Defined plan

• Clear end vision

• Frequent check-ins

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Page 31: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Don’t Forget

• You may be farther along than they are

• Fundamental attribution error

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Page 32: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

How can we manage our own emotions during

the change process?

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Page 33: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Manage Your own Elephant

• Pause

• Acknowledge feelings

• Avoid judgement

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Page 34: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Where are you Stuck?

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Technical: Resources & knowledge

Political: Power & influence

Cultural: Values, norms, mindsets

Page 35: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

When You’re REALLY Stuck

• What’s the story?

• What are some alternative stories?

• If a given alternative story is true, how might

you respond?

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Page 36: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Helpful Resources

Books

• Susan David, Emotional Agility: Get Unstuck, Embrace Change, and Thrive in

Work and Life

• Chip & Dan Health, Switch

• Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow

• John Kotter, Our Iceberg is Melting

Podcast

• Hidden Brain, March 12, 2018: Daniel Kahneman: On Misery, Memory, and Our

Understanding of the Mind

Blog Post

• Marshall Goldsmith: Learn to Respond, Not React!

National Rural Health Resource Center Website

• www.ruralcenter.org

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Page 37: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

References

Bartunek, J., Rousseau, D., Rudolph, J., & DePalma, J. (2006). On the receiving end: Sensemaking, emotion, and assessments of an organizational change initiated by others. Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 42:2.

Bridges, W. (2003). Managing Transitions: Making the Most of Change. Philadelphia: DaCapo Press.

Kozlowksi, D., Hutchinson, M., Hurley, J., Rowley, J., & Sutherland, J. (2017). The role of emotion in clinical decision making: An integrative literature review. BMC Medical Education, 17:255.

Kubler-Ross, E. (1969). On Death and Dying. New York: MacMillan.

Lerner, J., Small, D., & Loewenstein, G. (2004). Heart strings and purse strings: Carryover effects of emotions on economic decisions. Psychological Science, 15:5.

Scheck McAlearney, A., Hefner, J., Sieck, C., & Huerta, T. (2015). The Journey Through Grief: Insights from a Qualitative Study of Electronic Health Record Implementation. Health Services Research, 50:2.

Tichy, N. (1982). Managing change strategically: The technical, political, and cultural keys. Organizational Dynamics, 11(2), 59-80.

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Page 38: Leading Through Change - National Rural Health Resource Center Change.pdf · Leading Through Change Shannon Studden Program Specialist II July 18, 2018. 1. Rural Health Innovations’

Get to know us better:http://www.ruralcenter.org

Contact Information

Shannon Studden

Program Specialist II

218-216-7044

[email protected]

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