Claire McCarthy, MA
Douglas Eastman, PhD
Contributing Editor
David E. Garets, FHIMSS
Change Management
Strategies for an
Effective EMR
Implementation
Change Management Strategies
for an Efective
EMR Implementation
Claire McCarthy, MA
Douglas Eastman, PhD
Contributing Editor
David E. Garets, FHIMSS
HIMSS Mission
To lead healthcare transformation through the efective use of
health information technology.
© 2010 by the Healthcare Information and Management Systems
Society.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,
adapted, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in
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For more information about HIMSS, please visit www.himss.org.
iii
About the Authors
Claire McCarthy, MA, is a recognized change management/technol-
ogy adoption strategist and leader with extensive experience support-
ing people through transitions driven by sofware implementations,
mergers, reorganizations, process improvements, and downsizing in
the healthcare industry. Ms. McCarthy works with healthcare provid-
ers and staf at all levels. She advocates for the front line, understand-
ing that developing willingness and ability in people is what makes
change successful and produces lasting results. She speaks internation-
ally on the topic of technology adoption, encouraging healthcare lead-
ers to invest in the people side of electronic medical record (EMR)
implementations.
As Director of Organizational Efectiveness for Kaiser Perman-
ente’s national electronic medical records deployment, Ms. McCarthy
introduced the concept of technology adoption to the organization
and led a national community of practice focused on developing user
readiness. Trough integration of cross-functional work in change
management, training, communication, union engagement, opera-
tions, lessons learned and workforce planning, clinical and business
users were prepared to assume new roles and responsibilities in sup-
port of organizational objectives.
With 25 years of healthcare industry technology adoption experi-
ence, Ms. McCarthy has designed and led the human side of technical
implementations in a wide variety of sofware deployments, including
EMRs, practice management, material management/supply chain, cli-
ent relationship management, contracting and sourcing, e-commerce,
health plan product management, and, currently, ICD-10 conversion.
Ms. McCarthy is a certifed William Bridges Organizational
Change practitioner and is accredited in Accelerating Implementation
Methodology from Implementation Management Associates, Inc. She
holds a master’s degree in sociology from the University of Montana
and a bachelor’s degree in sociology from California State University.
iv Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
Doug Eastman, PhD, is an organizational development executive with
extensive experience managing large-scale change initiatives. With
more than 20 years of consulting experience, Dr. Eastman’s focus is
to help organizations grow and manage change by unleashing human
potential. His specialties are organizational transformation; technol-
ogy adoption and optimization; process redesign; large-scale change
management; strategic planning; program and tools development; and
facilitation.
As the Executive Director of Technology Adoption and Organiza-
tional Capability within the Kaiser Permanente Information Technol-
ogy Care Delivery Business Information Of ce, Dr. Eastman currently
advises senior operational and project executives on the country’s larg-
est private EMR system implementation. Dr. Eastman leverages best
practices from across the program and develops implementation read-
iness tools and methodologies, as well as pioneering several best prac-
tice post go-live optimization strategies and programs aimed to ensure
end-users are building the requisite level of system skill profciency.
Prior to joining Kaiser Permanente, Dr. Eastman’s consulting career
included positions with Andersen Consulting (now Accenture), Wat-
son Wyatt Worldwide, and a boutique employee relations consulting
frm. He was also vice president of operations for a technology services
frm for which he was responsible for the company’s restructuring and
repositioning in its marketplace that grew 200% during his tenure.
Dr. Eastman serves on the board of directors for the Childhood
Anxiety Network. He holds a PhD in organizational psychology from
the California School of Professional Psychology, a master’s degree in
psychology from Pepperdine University, and a bachelor’s degree from
Ohio State University.
ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
David E. Garets, FHIMSS, is President and CEO of HIMSS Analyt-
ics and Executive Vice President of HIMSS. Mr. Garets has 32 years of
experience in information technology. Before joining HIMSS Analyt-
ics in 2004, he was Executive Vice President at Healthlink. Prior to
that, he was Group Vice President, Healthcare Industry Research and
Advisory Services at Gartner. Previously, he was Senior Manager in
Emerging Practices at First Consulting Group and CIO of Magic Val-
ley Regional Medical Center in Twin Falls, Idaho. Prior to working in
the healthcare industry, Mr. Garets spent 13 years in various manage-
ment capacities for AT&T.
Mr. Garets was a course director and served on the faculties of the
College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME)
Information Management Executive Courses for 11 years. He serves
on the editorial advisory boards of three healthcare information tech-
nology journals and magazines and the board of directors of HIMSS
Analytics. He is an af liate professor at the Medical College of Virginia
at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Mr. Garets is a HIMSS Fellow, and was chair of the HIMSS Board
for 2003-2004. He is an internationally known author and speaker on
information technologies, strategies, benchmarking, and the future of
healthcare. Mr. Garets has a bachelor’s degree in business administra-
tion from Texas Tech University.
About the Authors v
vii
Contents
Foreword by David E. Garets, FHIMSS .................................................. ix
Preface by Claire McCarthy, MA, and Douglas Eastman, PhD .......... xi
Acknowledgments .................................................................................. xvii
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management .................. 1
Section 1: Leadership—Establishing a Foundation for Change .... 21
Chapter 2: Vision ................................................................................. 23
Chapter 3: Sponsorship ....................................................................... 37
Chapter 4: Organizational Readiness Team ..................................... 55
Section 2: Willingness—Building Commitment .............................. 77
Chapter 5: Stakeholder Management ................................................ 79
Chapter 6: Communication ............................................................... 95
Section 3: Ability—Developing Requisite Skill ............................... 109
Chapter 7: Training Strategy ............................................................ 111
Chapter 8: Reinforcement ................................................................ 127
Chapter 9: Implementation Readiness ............................................ 137
Section 4: Summary .............................................................................. 175
Chapter 10: Te Journey ................................................................... 177
References ............................................................................................. 185
Index ........................................................................................................ 187
ix
Foreword
By David E. Garets, FHIMSS
Electronic medical record (EMR) deployments are not about technol-
ogy. Tey are about equipping organizations to reach critical business
objectives by providing people with technical capabilities that make
new things possible and by engaging people in changing their behavior
to efectively use the new capabilities to generate results.
Tis book will show you how to create an environment for suc-
cess in your organization to not only ensure that your EMR imple-
mentation efort is successful but that your organization builds change
capacity and fexibility in the process. Tis new nimbleness will serve
you well in our world of continual change.
Defning change management is as important as understand-
ing what change management is not. It isn’t project management or
solely process improvement. Rather, it is a set of specifc disciplines,
described in detail in this book that, when coordinated and integrated,
make the diference between tossing money into an EMR pit (simi-
lar to the ones that we boaters throw our money into!) or getting the
sought-afer changes in your organization.
Chapter 2 on Vision is especially important. In it, Claire and Doug
explain how leadership paints the picture of what is expected from
the implementation of an EMR. I would argue that it is a process that
involves not only representatives of the front line and their managers
and the senior executive team, but also the board. An EMR implemen-
tation done right—meaning the technology works, was implemented
on time and within budget, and the people modify their behavior and
processes to achieve commensurate value for the investment—is more
transformative than anything else a healthcare organization could do.
It needs to be driven from the board. Tat way the right people, i.e.,
the CEO and executive management team, are held accountable for the
x Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
success of this crucial business initiative with an information technol-
ogy component.
Dale Sanders, then CIO at the Northwestern Medical Faculty Foun-
dation and now CIO at the Cayman Islands’ Health Services Author-
ity, pointed out that “you need to dedicate the time and resources to
constantly iterate, refne, and improve the utilization of the EMR over
time, far beyond its installation and go-live. It’s a race without a fn-
ish line. Train, fund and plan accordingly—don’t short-change the
investment!” In other words, recognize that you are not done at go-
live; you’ve just started achieving technology adoption and changing
behavior to get value from your EMR investment.
Tis book should be required reading for every member of the
executive team in every healthcare organization that is planning to
implement an EMR in the next few years. I was happy to be asked
to review the book and to write the foreword—and not for the fame
and fortune! It was because I would then have to read it, and I’m glad
I did. I learned an incredible amount about a topic that most of us in
the technology world do not understand well and that is, dealing with
people issues. Claire and Doug nail it here, and I guarantee you’ll be
thankful for the knowledge they share.
Having said that, reading this defnitive work on change man-
agement for EMR implementations is not going to provide you with
enough knowledge on the topic to preclude your engaging or hiring
change management expertise. In fact, just the opposite; you’ll fully
understand why you need to get some help! Welcome to the epiphany.
xi
Preface
By Claire McCarthy, MA, and Douglas Eastman, PhD
Tere is much discussion today about implementation of EMR sys-
tems—discussions that usually include excitement, anxiety, and
downright dread. Tere is also a lot of talk about whether EMRs cre-
ate opportunities for healthcare organizations, such as transforming
the way care is delivered, reducing medical errors, increasing internal
ef ciencies for clinical and administrative users, improving revenue
capture, and providing a host of other critical benefts. Te promise
(some would say fantasy) is big.
But, above all, an EMR implementation is disruptive. Te process
can realistically be equated to a tornado whipping through an organi-
zation, and life as you once knew it is turned upside down and the new
processes, expectations, priorities, roles and methods overwhelm the
workplace.
Our intent in writing this book is to assist others who may be
struggling with many of the same issues we have addressed. By sharing
lessons from our numerous frsthand sofware implementation expe-
riences, we will equip you with successful practices and prepare you
to lead or participate efectively in change management/technology
adoption eforts, so that meaningful use can be achieved.
Te primary audience of this book is everyone who leads or is
directly involved in the people-focused change management/tech-
nology adoption eforts of an EMR implementation. Our secondary
audience is everyone else who has a stake in the users’ willingness and
ability to change behavior so the potential of the technology can be
realized. So whether you are actively engaged in change management/
technology adoption work or your support and advocacy of change
management/technology adoption is needed—this book is for you.
Regardless of your specifc role (executive, middle-management,
front-line supervisor, physician, nurse, medical assistant, IT profes-
xii Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
sional, consultant, or other stakeholder in the success of an EMR
implementation), our hope is that you will gain an appreciation for
the importance of users and the efort required to ensure operational
success. Tis book emphasizes efective ways to plan and implement
change. Te content is based on decades of combined experience man-
aging the people side of sofware implementations in healthcare.
It is important to point out, however, that this book is not meant to
be a course on change management/technology adoption. Our intent
is not to review existing research or current academic models and the-
ories but rather to share the insights and lessons we have learned in
delivering sustainable results and healthy organizational change over
the years.
For technically-oriented project leads, the success of an EMR
implementation tends to focus too heavily on “screwing in the sys-
tem” on time and on budget. But, as important as it is, getting the
EMR technology up and running should not be the primary focus.
Equal emphasis must be placed on how the new technology will be
embraced, utilized, and leveraged to realize a return on this signif-
cant investment. Flipping the switch and turning the technology on is
merely half of the game.
We believe the promise of an EMR implementation is great, with
potentially signifcant returns for the patient, user, organization, and
for the industry as a whole. When we hear words such as electronic,
computerized and automated, it sounds as if life will be made easier and
become more organized and ef cient. However, healthcare organiza-
tions do not always think about the critical steps involved in making
these hopes a reality. Tis is due in large part because managing the
people side of an implementation, and developing and installing major
technology require diferent skills sets. Neither side of the coin is nec-
essarily more important, but they both must be seen as equally signif-
cant. Te role in managing the people side of an implementation rarely
fts neatly into how technically-focused projects have historically been
measured, and this creates a scenario in which the people side is ofen
misunderstood, discounted, and worst case, ignored altogether. Con-
sider the diference between what it takes to install the system (a tech-
nology focus) and what it takes to get the desired outcomes (a focus on
people doing things diferently).
Preface xiii
Te management of ambiguity, resistance, and user motivation is
admittedly hard to measure and unfortunately involves methods that
are not always easily checked of a list. Te process is more fuid and
organic than linear. At times, it is unpredictable, requiring rethink-
ing and course corrections. Afer all, we are dealing with people. Not
everything is clear cut. Don’t believe anyone who tells you it is!
People come with diferent backgrounds, frames of reference,
experience with technology, comfort with change or ambiguity, trust
in leadership, and so forth. Whatever the mix of scenarios, users never
start from the same place—and they move through the change pro-
cess at diferent speeds, meaning they continue to be in diferent places
throughout the project. Te good news is that users do grow and develop
over the course of the project, and many eventually accept things they
wouldn’t agree to at frst. But they require understanding—their fears,
needs, hopes, and their reactions to the challenges that impact their
ability to perform. A sound, comprehensive people strategy that cre-
ates an environment in which they can succeed is essential.
If the goal of your EMR implementation is to achieve sustainable
results, growth, or organizational transformation, then a substantial
investment in people must be central to your overall implementation
strategy. Afer all, it is the user who makes or breaks your EMR imple-
mentation and ultimately determines the amount of return the organi-
zation will realize. Te better prepared people are for the change and
the less they see it as threatening, the faster they will deliver value.
Quote
“”
“Man is still the most extraordinary computer of all.”
- John F. Kennedy
Quote
“” “”
“Man is still the most extraordinary computer of all.”
- John F. Kennedy
xiv Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
HOW THE BOOK IS STRUCTURED
Preparing an organization for a successful EMR implementation
involves a big picture approach that takes into account all the factors
that infuence behavior change. Te idea is to establish an organiza-
tional context—a culture in which desired behavior is supported and
reinforced through a variety of methods—creating a learning organiza-
tion that grows to achieve its vision, priorities, and goals. In this book,
we present an Implementation Readiness Model and discuss each fac-
tor involved in ensuring the organization and users are fully prepared
to realize the potential of the new technology.
Tis book is organized in a simple fashion. First, we make the busi-
ness argument for change management/technology adoption, explain-
ing why technology implementations will not deliver benefts without
a signifcant focus on users. Next, we discuss two critical success fac-
tors in any large-scale change management efort—a clear vision and
efective leadership.
Ten we argue for the development of a cross-functional team
of representatives from key areas within the organization, the Orga-
nizational Readiness Team (ORT), and introduce a pragmatic model
that outlines the scope of complexity and work that the ORT man-
ages throughout the project life cycle. Tis establishes a foundation
for subsequent chapters in which each provides further detail about
the inter-relationship of work involved to efectively drive sustain-
able change. Tese chapters dig deeper into lessons learned and best
practices related to stakeholder management, communication, train-
ing strategy, and reinforcement, as all must be aligned to successfully
satisfy the end goal of a meaningful implementation.
Finally, the Implementation Readiness chapter shows how the
prior chapters serve as building blocks to formulate a comprehensive
and powerful Implementation Readiness Program aimed at securing
ready users who are engaged and prepared for the transitional changes
ahead in the world of an EMR. Te book ends with a discussion of
our key lessons learned and insights regarding the overall journey. Pay
particular attention to some of the larger challenges related to an EMR
implementation, as these scenarios have proven to have a signifcant
impact on an organization’s speed and ability to position itself for ben-
efts realization.
Preface xv
It is important to stress that focusing on just one factor of imple-
mentation readiness is not suf cient to drive organizational change
and sustainable results. Each chapter describes an individual factor in
detail and provides lessons and useful examples, tools, and other bits
of information intended to help you succeed in preparing your orga-
nization for a successful EMR implementation. But the real purpose
of the book is to raise awareness of how all factors work in concert to
infuence desired change associated with an EMR implementation. Te
factors work best as an integrated whole, overlapping and reinforcing
each other. Tey typically have separate leadership, but whether for-
mally integrated or not, they are pieces of one picture.
Like other books, you can jump to any chapter of interest at any
point. However, we strongly encourage you to read the book cover to
cover frst to gain an understanding of the end-to-end process and how
each factor contributes to overall success. A strategy that accounts for
all factors is more efective than just one intervention or multiple dis-
connected interventions. In this case, the sum is defnitely greater than
all of its individual parts.
We speak to you in a conversational and straightforward man-
ner to make this rather dif cult side of an EMR implementation more
approachable. We hope you will fnd our insights valuable and will
leverage this book as your implementation reference guide. It will fur-
ther your cause if all stakeholders accountable for a successful launch
in your organization have a common framework for approaching the
collective end goal. We certainly wish we’d had a book like this years
ago to guide us through the minefeld of sofware implementations!
Finally, we hope you enjoy the process of supporting people
through the transition to the world of EMRs. Tere is something very
Quote
“”
“Experience is a hard teacher because she gives
the test first, the lessons afterwards.”
- Vernon Law
Quote
“” “”
“Experience is a hard teacher because she gives
the test first, the lessons afterwards.”
- Vernon Law
xvi Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
rewarding about seeing people who were fearful and resistant, even
in tears and thinking seriously of quitting, feel the pride of accom-
plishment when they succeed. Each person who stays the course and
becomes a contributing member of the electronically enabled organi-
zation represents untold cost avoidance. Knowledge and talent stay in
the organization, replacement costs are avoided, relationships are pre-
served and critical staf shortages are reduced. Technology adoption is
truly a contribution to the bottom line.
In the words of one of our grandfathers, “People change when
they’re damned good and ready, and not before.” We’re here to get
them ready!
xvii
Acknowledgments
Te authors would like to thank the following individuals for sharing
their expertise and experiences for this book:
Safaa Al-Haddad, MD
Internal Medicine
University Hospitals
Cleveland, Ohio
Ronnie D. Bower, Jr., MA
Manager, Change Management
BayCare Health System
Tampa, Florida
Nabil Chehade, MD, MSBS,
CPC
Director, Medical Informatics
Regional Chief of Urology
KP HealthConnect Regional
Physician Lead
Kaiser Permanente Medical
Group
Cleveland, Ohio
Kenneth Goodman, MD
Associate Director, Center
for Continuing Medical
Education
Department of Family Medicine
Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland, Ohio
Marie Hamilton, RN
Kaiser Permanente
Oregon Federation of Nurses
and Health Professionals
Healthcare Information
Technology Committee,
AFT Healthcare
Portland, Oregon
Lindsey P. Jarrell, FACHE
Senior Vice President & CIO
BayCare Health System
Tampa, Florida
J. Scott Joslyn
CIO
MemorialCare
Long Beach, California
Margaret M. Rudoph, PhD
Consultant
Vancouver, British Columbia
Canada
Tom Smith
CIO
NorthShore University Health
System
Evanston, Illinois
1
Chapter 1
Te Business Case for
Change Management
“We’re not in Kansas anymore…”
In the introduction, an EMR implementation is compared to a tornado
in that it whips through an organization, turning life upside down and
throwing users into a world flled with new ways of doing things and
seeking ways to recapture some sense of balance and control. EMR
technology disrupts the status quo, and along with the many opportu-
nities it promises, it also brings a whirlwind of seemingly never-ending
changes, which can have an entirely diferent efect on diferent people.
While an implementation that is efectively managed even brings these
challenges, a poor implementation can be disastrous and will cost the
organization much more time, energy, and money to get things back
on track.
Dorothy, the character from the movie Te Wizard of Oz, held
her composure pretty well through the tornado that ripped her from
a calm, stable life on the farm and threw her into a foreign world. She
was able to manage through the obstacles and challenges and stay the
course as she followed the yellow brick road in search of the wizard.
Some say this is similar to the experience users have, except for the
part when Dorothy wakes up from her dream and fnds herself back
home as she remembers it!
EMR implementations don’t have to be nightmarish for users, but
there certainly will be obstacles and challenges along the way. Te key is
to help users through the road blocks and enable them to experience a
2 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
positive journey. Tis process is always easier when people know what
they are getting into, feel supported, and are prepared for what lies
ahead, both good and bad. Tis is the role of change management.
CHANGE MANAGEMENT DEFINED
It’s important to understand why you should make an investment in
the people side of the project—bringing in the best technology pos-
sible doesn’t mean anything unless users are comfortable and prof-
cient in its use. Te truth is just because you build it doesn’t mean they
will come.
Let’s start by answering the two questions we are most ofen asked,
“What is change management anyway? What is it change managers
do?”
To avoid confusion we’ll say up front we are not talking about
change management as it relates to technical issues, such as version or
change control. We also want to be clear that change management is
not project management. What we are talking about is the human side
of electronic medical records implementations, the human-focused
work of engaging and preparing people to succeed in the new world
of EMRs.
A word about project management: while good project manage-
ment facilitates change management, the two disciplines are not the
same. Project management is much more linear and task-focused,
whereas change management deals with the complexities of human
behavior. But a good project plan creates a structure and a founda-
tion in which the change management process can occur. Terefore,
the two disciplines, though diferent, complement and support each
other.
A word of caution: do not confuse the project plan with the end
result. Te plan is necessary, and it guides you throughout the process.
Te plan is proactive; it’s the order in the chaos. But technology adop-
tion is kind of like herding cats; it’s unpredictable, and you need to
maintain fexibility to respond as things evolve. Tis is a more reactive
process than what may be expressed in a plan. In our experience, an
EMR implementation requires both structure and fexibility.
Tere is a saying in change management circles: When one door
closes another one opens, but sometimes it’s hell in the hallway. Change
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 3
management deals mostly with the hallway situation, facilitating the
human transition from the present to the future. Tese days, change is
ongoing and requires focused leadership if it is to be as fast and pain-
less as possible.
Te three legs of the project stool represent the critical compo-
nents of an implementation (Figure 1-1)—People, Process, and Tech-
nology. Te people are the most important! When technology projects
fail, it is primarily due to a lack of use and not a failure of the sof-
ware. Te focus of change management is people and the objective is
to change behavior. Tis is good for business because it accelerates the
change process so benefts are achieved faster. Change management
is not about being nice or placing an emphasis on feelings. It’s about
performance improvement and results.
If you search the literature, you will fnd a variety of defnitions of
human-focused change management. Tey all cover similar concepts,
sometimes using diferent terminology. Te simplest explanation of
change management is to say, “It’s all about the people!” But for the
purposes of this book, we expand on that concept and use the follow-
ing defnition of change management:
• A structured process designed to deal directly and intentionally
with the human factors involved in not just planning and imple-
menting an EMR but through behavior change, achieving the
anticipated benefts that justifed the project in the frst place.
• Desired behavior change is achieved by helping people understand
and internalize change and by preparing them to be successful
contributors in the future state. In the case of EMR implementa-
tions, efective change management delivers users who are willing
and able to use an EMR in a way that satisfes the requirements of
the job, the needs of the patient, and the health of the organization.
Key Tip
Our assumption is that the software you are implementing
works. If the software doesn’t work, you have another kind of
problem; one that even the best change management won’t
resolve.
Key Tip
Our assumption is that the software you are implementing
works. If the software doesn’t work, you have another kind of
problem—one that even the best change management won’t
resolve.
4 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
Well-designed, integrated, people-focused work builds logically
over time in a way that makes sense to the user. It brings users along,
guiding and supporting them so they arrive at where you want them
to be. Tis is about willingness and ability, hearts and minds. You must
have both!
Te overarching purpose of change management is to accelerate
the speed at which people move successfully through the change
process so that anticipated benefts are achieved faster. And there
are additional benefts to change management. Trough optimizing
the ef ciency and ef cacy of users, an efective EMR change manage-
ment program will also:
• Improve organizational outcomes and performance (efective use
of the system generates value to patients and the organization).
• Enhance employee satisfaction, morale, and engagement (when
people learn new skills, meet performance expectations, and con-
tribute to a greater good they feel pride in their accomplishments).
• Improve service quality (users feel valued and supported by an
organization that makes an investment in them; this positively
impacts how they treat patients).
Figure 1-1: The Three-legged Stool
Technology
People Process
Technology
People Process
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 5
• Help achieve hoped-for benefts (benefts that include EMR value
realization, reduction of errors, return on investment).
• Create higher levels of openness, trust, involvement, and teamwork
(develop an engaged workforce).
• Build change capability and capacity in the organization, resulting
in improved ability to respond quickly and efectively to new situa-
tions (create organizational nimbleness through embedded change
management knowledge, structure, and process).
In other words, it really is all about the people. Intentionally man-
aging the cultural, behavioral, and organizational changes that need
to take place to make the desired EMR future not only a reality but
a sustainable reality pays of on many levels in that it also facilitates
organizational transformation. Building on individual capability and
organizational capacity, change management results in a change-
capable culture—a huge advantage in today’s competitive and fast-
changing world.
Change Management, Technology Adoption—
What’s the Diference?
Tere are a number of terms that people use to refer to the work
involved in managing the people side of a change efort. We think of
change management as the mother ship, that is, the umbrella term that
embraces all specialties within the feld. Similar to the various special-
ties or domains of service within a healthcare system, change man-
agement professionals may choose specifc areas of focus. Technology
adoption, specifcally information technology (IT), is one such area,
and it involves the application of change management principles to the
implementation of IT. Te focus of this book is technology adoption,
and we will mostly use this term instead of change management
throughout the rest of the book.
Efective technology adoption professionals align themselves with
the operational/business side of the organization and tailor solutions
that drive behavioral change and tangible outcomes. Tey participate in
EMR implementation projects from the beginning, driving the people
side of change throughout and continuing to add value post-live as the
EMR becomes part of the central nervous system of the organization.
6 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PEOPLE SIDE
OF AN EMR IMPLEMENTATION
Tere are many references in the literature to failed change eforts and
IT implementations. Estimates are that only one third of these projects
achieve success, which means two thirds fail to meet expectations. Te
good news is that failure is optional, as much has been learned about
why some change eforts fail and others succeed.
Here’s the issue: while the change that is going to occur is an exter-
nal event—the EMR implementation, a reorganization, proposed out-
sourcing, a promotion, etc.—the transition from old to new that those
who are impacted experience is a psychological and emotional pro-
cess. It is this transition that is dif cult—even when a change is self-
imposed or considered positive.
In the words of William Bridges, a key thought leader in manage-
ment of transitions, “It isn’t the changes that do you in, it’s the transi-
tion afer the change that does!”
1
For an implementation team, part of the problem encountered
during transition is that change is messy: people start where they are,
not where we want them to be. And when considering the personnel
within a typical hospital, people can be all over the place in terms of
comfort with computers, stage in life, commitment to the organiza-
tion, fear of change, etc. Add to this the fact that for change to be suc-
cessful three things must occur. People:
• Must let go of their current reality; have an ending.
• Go through a confused period in-between (hell in the hallway).
• Only then can have a new beginning.
1
To take this a step further, while IT consultants want to install the
system and make enhancements, the users will ultimately determine
how the system is used. Tis use is afected by human, not technical,
factors:
• Diferent frames of reference, backgrounds, experiences with
technology.
• Organizational history and experience with other large-scale
change projects.
• Levels of resistance, fear, ability to deal with ambiguity.
• Degree of alignment of “What’s in it for me?” for the various stake-
holder groups.
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 7
• Inef ciencies uncovered because the system creates transparency.
• Workarounds that become quickly entrenched.
• Pressure to get through the day can override doing what is right.
• User work/life balance issues coming into play from the very
beginning.
All of these factors create problems for implementation teams that
just want to install technology! How do you efectively address the
people issues? Or is it easier to just install the technology and assume
that people will learn because they have to use it? Some on the imple-
mentation team may falsely assume that users of an EMR system will
snap into place over time and do what is right for the organization.
Tis thinking is a fool’s paradise.
In the foreword to this book, Dave Garets made the point that EMR
deployments are not about technology but about equipping organiza-
tions to reach critical business objectives by providing employees with
technical capabilities that make new things possible and by engaging
them in changing their behavior to efectively use the new capabilities
to generate desired results.
With all due respect to the technical side of an EMR implemen-
tation, installing the technology is only half the battle. Tis is not to
degrade the importance of the technology. Te fact that we spend a lot
of money researching technology, acquiring it, confguring it, install-
ing it, and supporting it speaks to its importance. If we weren’t imple-
menting EMRs, we wouldn’t even be having a discussion about EMR-
related change management!
8 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
But implementation of the technology is just a frst, and very nec-
essary, step—because in and of itself the technology does not generate
value. Te technology is necessary but not suf cient for beneft realiza-
tion to occur. To create value requires people, and this is why change
management is so important. Too much of a focus on technology, even
in the early stages, will create issues downstream. And even with the
best technology, if not used ef ciently, hoped-for benefts will be tough
to achieve.
CIO Perspective
“During my master's program I took an Organization Development
class that really opened my eyes to peoples’ needs during large-scale
change. Since the OD class I have been very interested in what makes
people tick and why people react in different ways to the same
environment. No matter how good of an idea a large-scale technology
implementation is, we will always have early adopters, average adopters
and laggards. As leaders within large organizations, we have a
responsibility to plan for, and respect, all types of technology adopters.
Ultimately the people who work within in our organizations want a positive
human experience when they are at work.
Utilizing a change management methodology enables the implementation
and leadership teams to provide a positive experience during the period of
significant change. By utilizing a solid change management methodology
the organization promotes team communication, a safer environment for
the patient, a work environment that promotes trust and an environment
where people are allowed to talk about the fear of change. All of this
promotes a better human experience and a much stronger work force.
…An effective change management program has meant the difference
between good go-lives and great go-lives at our 10 hospitals.”
Lindsey P. Jarrell, FACHE
SVP & CIO
BayCare Health System
Clearwater, FL
CIO Perspective
During my master's program I took an Organization Development
class that really opened my eyes to peoples’ needs during large-scale
change. Since the OD class I have been very interested in what makes
people tick and why people react in different ways to the same
environment. No matter how good of an idea a large-scale technology
implementation is, we will always have early adopters, average adopters
and laggards. As leaders within large organizations, we have a
responsibility to plan for, and respect, all types of technology adopters.
Ultimately the people who work within in our organizations want a positive
human experience when they are at work.
Utilizing a change management methodology enables the implementation
and leadership teams to provide a positive experience during the period of
significant change. By utilizing a solid change management methodology
the organization promotes team communication, a safer environment for
the patient, a work environment that promotes trust and an environment
where people are allowed to talk about the fear of change. All of this
promotes a better human experience and a much stronger work force.
…An effective change management program has meant the difference
between good go-lives and great go-lives at our 10 hospitals.
Lindsey P. Jarrell, FACHE
SVP & CIO
BayCare Health System
Clearwater, FL
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 9
Remember that change is a personal experience. It is also local and
individual. And it’s hard—even when it’s self-imposed and positive.
Tere are no shortcuts. People have to go through the process of change
in much the same way that we move through the stages of grief.
2
It can’t
be avoided or skipped. You can measure twice and cut once, or you
can cut now and then do costly remediation later. Either way, you can’t
avoid the expense or time required for real change to occur.
SYSTEMS PERSPECTIVE
Experienced technology adoption professionals embrace a systems
perspective when given the assignment to drive performance, man-
age perceptions, and increase the utilization of new and existing tech-
nology. A systems approach is the ability to see the big picture and
address the interrelationships among the variables within the fabric of
CIO Perspective
“I’ve been in healthcare IT a long time and I now realize it’s
all about change management. What was considered soft is
now hard. We know so much more about how to install
technology—It’s the people part we don’t know well yet,
and so it’s hard.”
Scott Joslyn
CIO
MemorialCare
Long Beach, CA
CIO Perspective
I’ve been in healthcare IT a long time and I now realize it’s
all about change management. What was considered soft is
now hard. We know so much more about how to install
technology—it’s the people part we don’t know well yet,
and so it’s hard.
J. Scott Joslyn
CIO
MemorialCare
Long Beach, CA
Quote
“”
“No man can think clearly when his fists are clenched.”
- George Jean Nathan
Quote
“” “”
“No man can think clearly when his fists are clenched.”
- George Jean Nathan
10 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
the organization and infuence the combined impact these variables
have on organizational efectiveness. As each variable has the power
to infuence the outcome of any intervention, behavior change is ofen
not sustainable because variables tend to work against one another.
Efective technology adoption strategies account for this interrelation-
ship/interdependency and aim to bring these variables into alignment
as a means for driving sustainable results.
Figure 1-2 introduces the Organizational Fabric Model, which
highlights the six primary threads (or variables) that are interwoven
in the fabric (or culture) of an organization. Te model suggests that
all six threads must work in concert to successfully shape the organi-
zational fabric. A well-woven technology adoption plan strategically
manipulates these threads to infuence desired change. A poorly woven
plan, in which a thread or combination of threads is not accounted
for, leads to disaster or, by way of analogy, will hit a snag down the
road. Depending on the fexibility and durability of this fabric, a snag
can result in a huge hole that detracts from the overall strength of the
intervention. Te intent of the Organizational Fabric Model is to stress
how important it is to understand the future state, recognize how each
variable or combination of variables will come into play, and develop a
sound technology adoption program that appropriately infuences this
set of variables to reshape the fabric or culture, so desired change can
actually take place.
Te Organizational Fabric Model will be revisited in subsequent
chapters as each thread or variable is explored in further detail. For
now, we reiterate that technology adoption strategies must not rely
on only one or two threads to drive behavior change. Sustainable out-
comes result from an organization’s ability to leverage the combination
of all six threads, working in concert, to create an environment for
success.
Key Point
Fundamentally, culture is “the way we do things around here.”
Key Point
Fundamentally, culture is “the way we do things around here.”
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 11
CREATING AN ENVIRONMENT FOR SUCCESS
Technology adoption is about creating a context, an environment, in
which change can be achieved and sustained over the long term. Tis
involves two levels—organizational and individual.
With an EMR implementation, the organization must create the
supporting environment, provide needed training and resources,
articulate a clear direction coupled with clear expectations, engage its
people, include them in the process, and reinforce desired new behav-
iors. Tis is not about checking things of a list, but rather about fnd-
ing synergy among impacted groups, giving them what they need, and
coordinating eforts to meet the end goal. It’s an ongoing efort.
To give you an idea of what we are talking about, here’s an exam-
ple of an individual situation occurring within a social context. Tink
about what happens when you want to make a signifcant change in
your personal life—quit smoking, stop drinking, lose weight. It’s one
thing to talk with a doctor or another professional about what needs
to happen when you’re in their of ce, but once you leave the of ce
you then return to your social reality. If your friends and family don’t
want your behavior to change, you will have a tough time. All the rein-
Figure 1-2: Organizational Fabric Model
Sponsorship
Stakeholder Mgmt
Training
Vision
Reinforcement
Communications
Sponsorship
Stakeholder Mgmt
Training
Vision
Reinforcement
Communications
12 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
forcements and temptations will conspire to prevent you from mak-
ing changes. But, if you can get some important people in your life
to make the changes with you, or at least support you in the process,
you have a much greater chance of success. Te lesson is don’t send a
changed person back into an unchanged environment if you want
to see behavior change!
Engaging individuals involves arousing two key aspects —willing-
ness and ability. Te organization must infuence both in order to suc-
ceed. With the help of the Skill Versus Will Matrix (Figure 1-3), think
about it this way:
• When people want to do something but don’t know how, they can’t
(willing/unable).
• When people know how, but don’t want to, they won’t
(able/unwilling).
Can you think of examples in your own life when you have been in
either of these situations?
Consider the circumstance of people who know how to do some-
thing, but don’t want to do it. Tis is a “will” not a “skill” issue, and it is
a very common technology adoption dilemma. If the amount of work
and efort involved are not perceived by the user as being equal to the
Figure 1-3: The Skill versus Will Matrix
Skill
Will
WON’T
WON’T
DOES
CAN’T Low
High
High Low
Skill
Will
WON’T
WON’T
DOES
CAN’T Low
High
High Low High Low
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 13
return or value experienced through the implementation, the user will
most likely choose to reduce the efort. A goal of an efective people-
focused strategy is to identify potential areas of disconnect and fnd
ways to increase the perceived value to users. Te assumption is that
when the return is perceived to be greater, the efort increases. When
there are no incentives to try harder, it may be dif cult to drive desired
behavior change.
Te point in getting users to actively support the deployment of
an EMR is about a lot more than a communication plan or feature/
function training. Managing the people side of an EMR implementa-
tion requires a savvy technology adoption plan that ties sponsorship,
training, communication, workfow harmonization, user support and
reinforcement with the business priorities of the organization and
efectively coordinates all of these activities with the user in mind—in
an environment that reinforces desired behavior changes.
Key Questions
?
Two key ques tions to remember throughout the
project are…
(1) How will this decision impact the user?
(2) How might it impact patients?
Key Questions
??
Two key questions to remember throughout the
project are
(1) How will this decision impact the user?
(2) How might it impact patients?
14 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
Consider this example:
In this example, what are the key elements of this process that
ensure success?
• Te picture of success, the desired outcome, is clear—it is for the
child to become a functioning adult in the community.
• How this happens is clearly defned in behavioral terms. Tere is a
process that is known and understood by the entire community,
including children.
• Leaders at all levels in the community agree on the desired out-
come, support the entire process, and actively fulfll their roles
to ensure success. Leaders include village elders and formal lead-
ers, parents of the children, informal opinion leaders, and family
members.
• Te children who are about to become adults take an active role
in their own transformation, taking responsibility for their suc-
cess. Tey receive guidance and counsel from elders. Tey know
and understand the transformation process and what they must do
to achieve their new status. Goals and steps are clear. Tey also
understand the consequences of not successfully transitioning to
adulthood.
• If there is more than one child slated to go through transformation
to adulthood at the same time they are a peer group and as appro-
priate, prepare together and support each other.
Key Point
In native cultures, there tend to be rites of passage that serve
to transition a person from childhood to adult status in the
community. The child may actually leave the village for a day or
two of contemplation, following a prescribed process. When the
child returns he or she is redefined as an adult and assumes
the consequent privileges and responsibilities. The entire
community reinforces the person’s new status; the new adult is
not allowed to return to being a child whenever it’s convenient,
but is supported to complete the transformation to adulthood.
The change to adulthood does not happen in a vacuum but is
part of a carefully designed process that ensures success.
Key Point
In native cultures, there tend to be rites of passage that serve
to transition a person from childhood to adult status in the
community. The child may actually leave the village for a day or
two of contemplation, following a prescribed process. When the
child returns he or she is redefined as an adult and assumes
the consequent privileges and responsibilities. The entire
community reinforces the person’s new status; the new adult is
not allowed to return to being a child whenever it’s convenient,
but is supported to complete the transformation to adulthood.
The change to adulthood does not happen in a vacuum but is
part of a carefully designed process that ensures success.
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 15
• Te entire community works together to bring about the
transformation.
• Success results in positive reinforcement.
Te environmental context is the trump card in any implementer’s
hand. It takes a lot of work to create a suitable environment, but it is an
essential ingredient in being able to drive and sustain change.
Willingness and Ability
Earlier we mentioned willingness and ability as key concepts in tech-
nology adoption. Willingness and ability can also be thought of as
hearts and minds, or will and skill. Te point is the same regardless
of the terms used. People need to be supported on both an emotional
level, to commit, and on an intellectual level, to be able. Te question
to be answered is, “What are the conditions under which users will
accept and adopt the EMR?”
Let’s talk about willingness frst.
Willingness, or hearts, is the commitment to go forward. Tis is
impacted by many things including the following elements:
• Leadership: Perceived support, or lack of support, for the change
from senior executives in the company, the cascade of sponsors
down through the organization, and, just as importantly, from the
employee’s direct supervisor.
• Communication: Quality and frequency of verbal and written
messages that describe the desired future state: tell why the change
needs to happen and what will happen if change isn’t made, set
clear expectations, explain how the company will prepare and sup-
port people to success, and describe local details such as timelines,
etc.
• Reinforcement: Degree of appropriateness and timeliness of
rewards for demonstrating desired new behaviors and conse-
quences for sticking to the old ways.
• Participation: Degree to which users are involved, every step of
the way, either directly as individuals or indirectly by being efec-
tively represented by trusted local opinion leader peers who serve
as liaisons between users and the project team.
• Organizational History with Change: Previous organizational
experience with change—good and bad—will infuence user per-
16 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
ceptions and expectations of the EMR implementation. Under-
standing the past is important in planning for the future.
Tis all sounds logical but the reaction to it can be emotional. Tis
is where people confront their fear of failure, feeling stupid, making
mistakes, etc. Remember that the change may require people to give
up the very things that they believe made them successful in the past.
Tis can be a dif cult sell.
Ability, or minds, is about the actual capability to successfully
meet new job expectations. Tis is impacted by many things including
the following elements:
• Training and Support: In most cases, the new EMR abilities must
be learned. An efective training program that is role-based and
intentionally focused on preparing people to perform new job
expectations is key. Just discussing desired outcomes is not enough
though; we have to clearly tell people what we want them to do.
Tis requires an intellectual understanding of what and how; a
conceptual understanding is necessary but not suf cient. Most
people need to practice something new to develop competence and
confdence. Safe opportunities to practice, preferably with immedi-
ate feedback, are very important to profciency development and
sustainability.
Getting people to move in the direction you want is the dif -
culty—some say the hardest part of the whole project. And if you agree
that people are the foundation of success—that beneft realization is
dependant, not on technology, but on people agreeing to go through
personal disruption, learn new things, change established patterns and
confront their fears—then we must be proactive and courageous in
addressing the human issues.
Tis is the people side of the project. Tis is the organizational read-
iness function. It involves collaboration, coordination and sequencing
of activities, information and events from all people-focused areas. Te
idea is to have all the people-focused functions working together to
reach clearly defned, shared outcomes. Te organizational readiness
plan to create individual and organizational readiness is the umbrella
that connects it all—the glue that holds it together and the grease that
makes it work—for the user. We will address the structure and process
for doing this in more detail in subsequent chapters.
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 17
Good News on Two Fronts
1. Tere is a social science! Tere is a body of work, research and
subsequent publications about the human experience with change.
Tere are proven change management strategies, tools, and tech-
niques. Tis isn’t folklore, hooey, or black magic. Te transition
process is known and predictable. Tere is a change curve that
describes the steps (Chapter 5, Stakeholder Management). And
though there is no silver bullet, it isn’t rocket science. Senior
healthcare executives must take the emerging profession of change
management/technology adoption seriously. Not understanding it
is no excuse for ignoring it. Tat is far too expensive an option.
2. All people go through transition when change—good or bad—
happens, in both their personal and professional life. You can’t
avoid it. Te wonderful thing is if you learn about change and
transition at work, it will improve your personal life. Tis is one
of the times to “try this at home!” We’re all human—at work and
at home. So treat your people as the humans they are, and avoid
some predictable expense and dif culty. Lead your organization
to a successful outcome, and speed up the process by treating your
staf as customers frst.
Don’t make the mistake of glossing over the critical human aspects
of change. Hire experts and fnd the emotionally intelligent people in
your organization who want to participate. And remember, you can
install technology without your people, but you can’t fully implement
and achieve return on investment without them. Consciously choose
to move fear and resistance to trust and adoption. It’s a case of pay
now or pay later. If you wait until later, it will always cost more. Tech-
nology Adoption is expensive but not as expensive as trying to gloss
it over and then having to undo the damage. When failure happens, it
Quote
“”
“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that
counts can be counted.”
- Albert Einstein
Quote
“” “”
“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that
counts can be counted.”
- Albert Einstein
18 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
takes a long time for people to re-engage. And in today’s world, this
presents real problems for healthcare organizations faced with short-
ages in many professions. Tere is a huge risk of alienating and poten-
tially losing needed staf or in causing long delays. We can do better.
Not so long ago, it wasn’t conventional wisdom that clinical application
rollouts are not IT projects. More frequently than not, these were consid-
ered technical projects in which the point of celebration was when con-
nection from workstation to central processor was reliable and wireless
access actually worked. Te classic IT People-Process-Technology trian-
gle never got much past Technology to the real hard work on the People-
Process axis. Tat has all changed in the 21st century; system implemen-
tations that are both successful and valuable have had people and process
on the front burner.
When MemorialCare embarked on a fve-hospital roll-out of an
EMR in 2002, it had several things in its favor:
• Te technology the organization ultimately acquired was robust and
reliable; it worked.
• It had 15 years’ experience with CPOE (computerized provider
order entry). Terefore, although unevenly adopted, it was not new
territory.
• It had had the experience of a system-wide roll-out and standard-
ization on a general fnance, human resources, and materials man-
agement system. When all was said and done, users had not been
suf ciently involved, standardization fell short because involvement
was low, business leadership was difuse, and IT ownership was too
high. It was judged successful overall, but the organization continues
to move slowly forward with an underutilized set of applications.
With this experience and the insights of others, MemorialCare pri-
oritized engagement of physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and other staf.
Well before fnancial commitment to a new system was obtained, Memo-
rialCare hired a “Care Planning Executive,” a person whose full-time
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 19
activities were devoted to the project, frst to help understand the drivers
of a new system, scope out the territory to be covered, gain the com-
mitment of senior leaders, as well as governance, and outline the case
for change. At my insistence, the Care Planning Executive, a registered
nurse and former hospital chief operating of cer, joined the organization,
reporting to the system-wide CEO, as a peer and partner of the CIO, not
a staf member, and a peer to the CEOs of each medical center campus.
Tat dedication alone made clear the commitment, intentions, and over-
all priority of the company.
Among several other critical success factors—and the outcome was
a success—was the overall employee engagement program that the Care
Planning Executive established. In summary, it was an education, mar-
keting, and training program dedicated to equipping the afected staf
with the knowledge and tools to embrace unavoidable change. Staf com-
munication was clear that it wasn’t change for change’s sake but a major
move forward in the paperless way care would be delivered and work-
fows would be streamlined. Of course, at the time, no one could have
foreseen later moves by government to push everyone in this direction
(with the American Recovery and Reconstruction Act of 2009). Because
of our early eforts, we’re now very well positioned.
J. Scott Joslyn
CIO
MemorialCare
Long Beach, California
ADJUST THE SPINE
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About the Book
Despite the promise of improving care and other bene?ts, EMR implementations are highly disruptive to the
organization. This book prepares you to lead or participate successfully in change management/technology
adoption efforts, so that meaningful use of EMRs can be achieved. The authors provide successful strategies
to plan and implement change. The content is based on their decades of combined experience designing
and leading technology adoption programs.
Sections of the book deal with establishing a foundation for change, building commitment, and developing
requisite skill in helping users be successful with technology. The book includes numerous lessons learned,
tips for success, best practices and case studies from organizations that have handled change well.
About the Authors
Claire McCarthy, MA, is a recognized technology adoption strategist and leader
with 25 years of healthcare industry experience supporting people through software
implementations and other large-scale change efforts. As Director of Organizational
Effectiveness for Kaiser Permanente’s enterprise-wide EMR deployment, Ms. McCarthy
led a national community of practice focused on preparing users to assume new
roles and responsibilities in support of organizational objectives. Ms. McCarthy
speaks internationally on the topic of technology adoption, encouraging healthcare
leaders around the globe to set the stage for bene?t realization by investing in the
people side of EMR implementation.
Douglas Eastman, PhD, is an organizational development executive with extensive
experience managing large-scale change initiatives. With more than 20 years
of consulting experience, Dr. Eastman’s focus is to help organizations grow and
manage change by unleashing human potential. His specialties are organizational
transformation, technology adoption and optimization, process redesign, strategic
planning, and program and tools development. As the Executive Director of Technology
Adoption and Organizational Capability within the Kaiser Permanente IT Care
Delivery Business Information Of?ce, Dr. Eastman has pioneered several of Kaiser’s
implementation readiness tools/methodologies and post-live optimization strategies/
programs, adding to the organization’s ability to realize the bene?t of its technology.
About HIMSS
The Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) is a comprehensive healthcare-
stakeholder membership organization exclusively focused on providing global leadership for the optimal
use of information technology (IT) and management systems for the betterment of healthcare. Founded in
1961 with of?ces in Chicago, Washington D.C., Brussels, Singapore, and other locations across the United
States, HIMSS represents more than 23,000 individual members, of which 73% work in patient care delivery
settings. HIMSS also includes over 380 corporate members and nearly 30 not-for-pro?t organizations that
share our mission of transforming healthcare through the effective use of information technology and
management systems. HIMSS frames and leads healthcare public policy and industry practices through
its educational, professional development, and advocacy initiatives designed to promote information and
management systems’ contributions to ensuring quality patient care.
ISBN: 978-0-9821070-6-5
Order Code: 564
230 E. Ohio St., Suite 500
Chicago, IL 60611–3270
312-915-9295
www.himss.org
Claire McCarthy, MA
Douglas Eastman, PhD
Contributing Editor
David E. Garets, FHIMSS
Change Management
Strategies for an
Effective EMR
Implementation
doc_676221919.pdf
Douglas Eastman, PhD
Contributing Editor
David E. Garets, FHIMSS
Change Management
Strategies for an
Effective EMR
Implementation
Change Management Strategies
for an Efective
EMR Implementation
Claire McCarthy, MA
Douglas Eastman, PhD
Contributing Editor
David E. Garets, FHIMSS
HIMSS Mission
To lead healthcare transformation through the efective use of
health information technology.
© 2010 by the Healthcare Information and Management Systems
Society.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,
adapted, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in
any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of
the publisher.
Printed in the U.S.A. 5 4 3 2 1
Requests for permission to reproduce any part of this work should
be sent to:
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ISBN: 978-0-9821070-6-5
Te inclusion of an organization name, product or service in
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such organization, product or service, nor is the failure to include
an organization name, product or service to be construed as
disapproval.
For more information about HIMSS, please visit www.himss.org.
iii
About the Authors
Claire McCarthy, MA, is a recognized change management/technol-
ogy adoption strategist and leader with extensive experience support-
ing people through transitions driven by sofware implementations,
mergers, reorganizations, process improvements, and downsizing in
the healthcare industry. Ms. McCarthy works with healthcare provid-
ers and staf at all levels. She advocates for the front line, understand-
ing that developing willingness and ability in people is what makes
change successful and produces lasting results. She speaks internation-
ally on the topic of technology adoption, encouraging healthcare lead-
ers to invest in the people side of electronic medical record (EMR)
implementations.
As Director of Organizational Efectiveness for Kaiser Perman-
ente’s national electronic medical records deployment, Ms. McCarthy
introduced the concept of technology adoption to the organization
and led a national community of practice focused on developing user
readiness. Trough integration of cross-functional work in change
management, training, communication, union engagement, opera-
tions, lessons learned and workforce planning, clinical and business
users were prepared to assume new roles and responsibilities in sup-
port of organizational objectives.
With 25 years of healthcare industry technology adoption experi-
ence, Ms. McCarthy has designed and led the human side of technical
implementations in a wide variety of sofware deployments, including
EMRs, practice management, material management/supply chain, cli-
ent relationship management, contracting and sourcing, e-commerce,
health plan product management, and, currently, ICD-10 conversion.
Ms. McCarthy is a certifed William Bridges Organizational
Change practitioner and is accredited in Accelerating Implementation
Methodology from Implementation Management Associates, Inc. She
holds a master’s degree in sociology from the University of Montana
and a bachelor’s degree in sociology from California State University.
iv Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
Doug Eastman, PhD, is an organizational development executive with
extensive experience managing large-scale change initiatives. With
more than 20 years of consulting experience, Dr. Eastman’s focus is
to help organizations grow and manage change by unleashing human
potential. His specialties are organizational transformation; technol-
ogy adoption and optimization; process redesign; large-scale change
management; strategic planning; program and tools development; and
facilitation.
As the Executive Director of Technology Adoption and Organiza-
tional Capability within the Kaiser Permanente Information Technol-
ogy Care Delivery Business Information Of ce, Dr. Eastman currently
advises senior operational and project executives on the country’s larg-
est private EMR system implementation. Dr. Eastman leverages best
practices from across the program and develops implementation read-
iness tools and methodologies, as well as pioneering several best prac-
tice post go-live optimization strategies and programs aimed to ensure
end-users are building the requisite level of system skill profciency.
Prior to joining Kaiser Permanente, Dr. Eastman’s consulting career
included positions with Andersen Consulting (now Accenture), Wat-
son Wyatt Worldwide, and a boutique employee relations consulting
frm. He was also vice president of operations for a technology services
frm for which he was responsible for the company’s restructuring and
repositioning in its marketplace that grew 200% during his tenure.
Dr. Eastman serves on the board of directors for the Childhood
Anxiety Network. He holds a PhD in organizational psychology from
the California School of Professional Psychology, a master’s degree in
psychology from Pepperdine University, and a bachelor’s degree from
Ohio State University.
ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
David E. Garets, FHIMSS, is President and CEO of HIMSS Analyt-
ics and Executive Vice President of HIMSS. Mr. Garets has 32 years of
experience in information technology. Before joining HIMSS Analyt-
ics in 2004, he was Executive Vice President at Healthlink. Prior to
that, he was Group Vice President, Healthcare Industry Research and
Advisory Services at Gartner. Previously, he was Senior Manager in
Emerging Practices at First Consulting Group and CIO of Magic Val-
ley Regional Medical Center in Twin Falls, Idaho. Prior to working in
the healthcare industry, Mr. Garets spent 13 years in various manage-
ment capacities for AT&T.
Mr. Garets was a course director and served on the faculties of the
College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME)
Information Management Executive Courses for 11 years. He serves
on the editorial advisory boards of three healthcare information tech-
nology journals and magazines and the board of directors of HIMSS
Analytics. He is an af liate professor at the Medical College of Virginia
at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Mr. Garets is a HIMSS Fellow, and was chair of the HIMSS Board
for 2003-2004. He is an internationally known author and speaker on
information technologies, strategies, benchmarking, and the future of
healthcare. Mr. Garets has a bachelor’s degree in business administra-
tion from Texas Tech University.
About the Authors v
vii
Contents
Foreword by David E. Garets, FHIMSS .................................................. ix
Preface by Claire McCarthy, MA, and Douglas Eastman, PhD .......... xi
Acknowledgments .................................................................................. xvii
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management .................. 1
Section 1: Leadership—Establishing a Foundation for Change .... 21
Chapter 2: Vision ................................................................................. 23
Chapter 3: Sponsorship ....................................................................... 37
Chapter 4: Organizational Readiness Team ..................................... 55
Section 2: Willingness—Building Commitment .............................. 77
Chapter 5: Stakeholder Management ................................................ 79
Chapter 6: Communication ............................................................... 95
Section 3: Ability—Developing Requisite Skill ............................... 109
Chapter 7: Training Strategy ............................................................ 111
Chapter 8: Reinforcement ................................................................ 127
Chapter 9: Implementation Readiness ............................................ 137
Section 4: Summary .............................................................................. 175
Chapter 10: Te Journey ................................................................... 177
References ............................................................................................. 185
Index ........................................................................................................ 187
ix
Foreword
By David E. Garets, FHIMSS
Electronic medical record (EMR) deployments are not about technol-
ogy. Tey are about equipping organizations to reach critical business
objectives by providing people with technical capabilities that make
new things possible and by engaging people in changing their behavior
to efectively use the new capabilities to generate results.
Tis book will show you how to create an environment for suc-
cess in your organization to not only ensure that your EMR imple-
mentation efort is successful but that your organization builds change
capacity and fexibility in the process. Tis new nimbleness will serve
you well in our world of continual change.
Defning change management is as important as understand-
ing what change management is not. It isn’t project management or
solely process improvement. Rather, it is a set of specifc disciplines,
described in detail in this book that, when coordinated and integrated,
make the diference between tossing money into an EMR pit (simi-
lar to the ones that we boaters throw our money into!) or getting the
sought-afer changes in your organization.
Chapter 2 on Vision is especially important. In it, Claire and Doug
explain how leadership paints the picture of what is expected from
the implementation of an EMR. I would argue that it is a process that
involves not only representatives of the front line and their managers
and the senior executive team, but also the board. An EMR implemen-
tation done right—meaning the technology works, was implemented
on time and within budget, and the people modify their behavior and
processes to achieve commensurate value for the investment—is more
transformative than anything else a healthcare organization could do.
It needs to be driven from the board. Tat way the right people, i.e.,
the CEO and executive management team, are held accountable for the
x Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
success of this crucial business initiative with an information technol-
ogy component.
Dale Sanders, then CIO at the Northwestern Medical Faculty Foun-
dation and now CIO at the Cayman Islands’ Health Services Author-
ity, pointed out that “you need to dedicate the time and resources to
constantly iterate, refne, and improve the utilization of the EMR over
time, far beyond its installation and go-live. It’s a race without a fn-
ish line. Train, fund and plan accordingly—don’t short-change the
investment!” In other words, recognize that you are not done at go-
live; you’ve just started achieving technology adoption and changing
behavior to get value from your EMR investment.
Tis book should be required reading for every member of the
executive team in every healthcare organization that is planning to
implement an EMR in the next few years. I was happy to be asked
to review the book and to write the foreword—and not for the fame
and fortune! It was because I would then have to read it, and I’m glad
I did. I learned an incredible amount about a topic that most of us in
the technology world do not understand well and that is, dealing with
people issues. Claire and Doug nail it here, and I guarantee you’ll be
thankful for the knowledge they share.
Having said that, reading this defnitive work on change man-
agement for EMR implementations is not going to provide you with
enough knowledge on the topic to preclude your engaging or hiring
change management expertise. In fact, just the opposite; you’ll fully
understand why you need to get some help! Welcome to the epiphany.
xi
Preface
By Claire McCarthy, MA, and Douglas Eastman, PhD
Tere is much discussion today about implementation of EMR sys-
tems—discussions that usually include excitement, anxiety, and
downright dread. Tere is also a lot of talk about whether EMRs cre-
ate opportunities for healthcare organizations, such as transforming
the way care is delivered, reducing medical errors, increasing internal
ef ciencies for clinical and administrative users, improving revenue
capture, and providing a host of other critical benefts. Te promise
(some would say fantasy) is big.
But, above all, an EMR implementation is disruptive. Te process
can realistically be equated to a tornado whipping through an organi-
zation, and life as you once knew it is turned upside down and the new
processes, expectations, priorities, roles and methods overwhelm the
workplace.
Our intent in writing this book is to assist others who may be
struggling with many of the same issues we have addressed. By sharing
lessons from our numerous frsthand sofware implementation expe-
riences, we will equip you with successful practices and prepare you
to lead or participate efectively in change management/technology
adoption eforts, so that meaningful use can be achieved.
Te primary audience of this book is everyone who leads or is
directly involved in the people-focused change management/tech-
nology adoption eforts of an EMR implementation. Our secondary
audience is everyone else who has a stake in the users’ willingness and
ability to change behavior so the potential of the technology can be
realized. So whether you are actively engaged in change management/
technology adoption work or your support and advocacy of change
management/technology adoption is needed—this book is for you.
Regardless of your specifc role (executive, middle-management,
front-line supervisor, physician, nurse, medical assistant, IT profes-
xii Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
sional, consultant, or other stakeholder in the success of an EMR
implementation), our hope is that you will gain an appreciation for
the importance of users and the efort required to ensure operational
success. Tis book emphasizes efective ways to plan and implement
change. Te content is based on decades of combined experience man-
aging the people side of sofware implementations in healthcare.
It is important to point out, however, that this book is not meant to
be a course on change management/technology adoption. Our intent
is not to review existing research or current academic models and the-
ories but rather to share the insights and lessons we have learned in
delivering sustainable results and healthy organizational change over
the years.
For technically-oriented project leads, the success of an EMR
implementation tends to focus too heavily on “screwing in the sys-
tem” on time and on budget. But, as important as it is, getting the
EMR technology up and running should not be the primary focus.
Equal emphasis must be placed on how the new technology will be
embraced, utilized, and leveraged to realize a return on this signif-
cant investment. Flipping the switch and turning the technology on is
merely half of the game.
We believe the promise of an EMR implementation is great, with
potentially signifcant returns for the patient, user, organization, and
for the industry as a whole. When we hear words such as electronic,
computerized and automated, it sounds as if life will be made easier and
become more organized and ef cient. However, healthcare organiza-
tions do not always think about the critical steps involved in making
these hopes a reality. Tis is due in large part because managing the
people side of an implementation, and developing and installing major
technology require diferent skills sets. Neither side of the coin is nec-
essarily more important, but they both must be seen as equally signif-
cant. Te role in managing the people side of an implementation rarely
fts neatly into how technically-focused projects have historically been
measured, and this creates a scenario in which the people side is ofen
misunderstood, discounted, and worst case, ignored altogether. Con-
sider the diference between what it takes to install the system (a tech-
nology focus) and what it takes to get the desired outcomes (a focus on
people doing things diferently).
Preface xiii
Te management of ambiguity, resistance, and user motivation is
admittedly hard to measure and unfortunately involves methods that
are not always easily checked of a list. Te process is more fuid and
organic than linear. At times, it is unpredictable, requiring rethink-
ing and course corrections. Afer all, we are dealing with people. Not
everything is clear cut. Don’t believe anyone who tells you it is!
People come with diferent backgrounds, frames of reference,
experience with technology, comfort with change or ambiguity, trust
in leadership, and so forth. Whatever the mix of scenarios, users never
start from the same place—and they move through the change pro-
cess at diferent speeds, meaning they continue to be in diferent places
throughout the project. Te good news is that users do grow and develop
over the course of the project, and many eventually accept things they
wouldn’t agree to at frst. But they require understanding—their fears,
needs, hopes, and their reactions to the challenges that impact their
ability to perform. A sound, comprehensive people strategy that cre-
ates an environment in which they can succeed is essential.
If the goal of your EMR implementation is to achieve sustainable
results, growth, or organizational transformation, then a substantial
investment in people must be central to your overall implementation
strategy. Afer all, it is the user who makes or breaks your EMR imple-
mentation and ultimately determines the amount of return the organi-
zation will realize. Te better prepared people are for the change and
the less they see it as threatening, the faster they will deliver value.
Quote
“”
“Man is still the most extraordinary computer of all.”
- John F. Kennedy
Quote
“” “”
“Man is still the most extraordinary computer of all.”
- John F. Kennedy
xiv Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
HOW THE BOOK IS STRUCTURED
Preparing an organization for a successful EMR implementation
involves a big picture approach that takes into account all the factors
that infuence behavior change. Te idea is to establish an organiza-
tional context—a culture in which desired behavior is supported and
reinforced through a variety of methods—creating a learning organiza-
tion that grows to achieve its vision, priorities, and goals. In this book,
we present an Implementation Readiness Model and discuss each fac-
tor involved in ensuring the organization and users are fully prepared
to realize the potential of the new technology.
Tis book is organized in a simple fashion. First, we make the busi-
ness argument for change management/technology adoption, explain-
ing why technology implementations will not deliver benefts without
a signifcant focus on users. Next, we discuss two critical success fac-
tors in any large-scale change management efort—a clear vision and
efective leadership.
Ten we argue for the development of a cross-functional team
of representatives from key areas within the organization, the Orga-
nizational Readiness Team (ORT), and introduce a pragmatic model
that outlines the scope of complexity and work that the ORT man-
ages throughout the project life cycle. Tis establishes a foundation
for subsequent chapters in which each provides further detail about
the inter-relationship of work involved to efectively drive sustain-
able change. Tese chapters dig deeper into lessons learned and best
practices related to stakeholder management, communication, train-
ing strategy, and reinforcement, as all must be aligned to successfully
satisfy the end goal of a meaningful implementation.
Finally, the Implementation Readiness chapter shows how the
prior chapters serve as building blocks to formulate a comprehensive
and powerful Implementation Readiness Program aimed at securing
ready users who are engaged and prepared for the transitional changes
ahead in the world of an EMR. Te book ends with a discussion of
our key lessons learned and insights regarding the overall journey. Pay
particular attention to some of the larger challenges related to an EMR
implementation, as these scenarios have proven to have a signifcant
impact on an organization’s speed and ability to position itself for ben-
efts realization.
Preface xv
It is important to stress that focusing on just one factor of imple-
mentation readiness is not suf cient to drive organizational change
and sustainable results. Each chapter describes an individual factor in
detail and provides lessons and useful examples, tools, and other bits
of information intended to help you succeed in preparing your orga-
nization for a successful EMR implementation. But the real purpose
of the book is to raise awareness of how all factors work in concert to
infuence desired change associated with an EMR implementation. Te
factors work best as an integrated whole, overlapping and reinforcing
each other. Tey typically have separate leadership, but whether for-
mally integrated or not, they are pieces of one picture.
Like other books, you can jump to any chapter of interest at any
point. However, we strongly encourage you to read the book cover to
cover frst to gain an understanding of the end-to-end process and how
each factor contributes to overall success. A strategy that accounts for
all factors is more efective than just one intervention or multiple dis-
connected interventions. In this case, the sum is defnitely greater than
all of its individual parts.
We speak to you in a conversational and straightforward man-
ner to make this rather dif cult side of an EMR implementation more
approachable. We hope you will fnd our insights valuable and will
leverage this book as your implementation reference guide. It will fur-
ther your cause if all stakeholders accountable for a successful launch
in your organization have a common framework for approaching the
collective end goal. We certainly wish we’d had a book like this years
ago to guide us through the minefeld of sofware implementations!
Finally, we hope you enjoy the process of supporting people
through the transition to the world of EMRs. Tere is something very
Quote
“”
“Experience is a hard teacher because she gives
the test first, the lessons afterwards.”
- Vernon Law
Quote
“” “”
“Experience is a hard teacher because she gives
the test first, the lessons afterwards.”
- Vernon Law
xvi Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
rewarding about seeing people who were fearful and resistant, even
in tears and thinking seriously of quitting, feel the pride of accom-
plishment when they succeed. Each person who stays the course and
becomes a contributing member of the electronically enabled organi-
zation represents untold cost avoidance. Knowledge and talent stay in
the organization, replacement costs are avoided, relationships are pre-
served and critical staf shortages are reduced. Technology adoption is
truly a contribution to the bottom line.
In the words of one of our grandfathers, “People change when
they’re damned good and ready, and not before.” We’re here to get
them ready!
xvii
Acknowledgments
Te authors would like to thank the following individuals for sharing
their expertise and experiences for this book:
Safaa Al-Haddad, MD
Internal Medicine
University Hospitals
Cleveland, Ohio
Ronnie D. Bower, Jr., MA
Manager, Change Management
BayCare Health System
Tampa, Florida
Nabil Chehade, MD, MSBS,
CPC
Director, Medical Informatics
Regional Chief of Urology
KP HealthConnect Regional
Physician Lead
Kaiser Permanente Medical
Group
Cleveland, Ohio
Kenneth Goodman, MD
Associate Director, Center
for Continuing Medical
Education
Department of Family Medicine
Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland, Ohio
Marie Hamilton, RN
Kaiser Permanente
Oregon Federation of Nurses
and Health Professionals
Healthcare Information
Technology Committee,
AFT Healthcare
Portland, Oregon
Lindsey P. Jarrell, FACHE
Senior Vice President & CIO
BayCare Health System
Tampa, Florida
J. Scott Joslyn
CIO
MemorialCare
Long Beach, California
Margaret M. Rudoph, PhD
Consultant
Vancouver, British Columbia
Canada
Tom Smith
CIO
NorthShore University Health
System
Evanston, Illinois
1
Chapter 1
Te Business Case for
Change Management
“We’re not in Kansas anymore…”
In the introduction, an EMR implementation is compared to a tornado
in that it whips through an organization, turning life upside down and
throwing users into a world flled with new ways of doing things and
seeking ways to recapture some sense of balance and control. EMR
technology disrupts the status quo, and along with the many opportu-
nities it promises, it also brings a whirlwind of seemingly never-ending
changes, which can have an entirely diferent efect on diferent people.
While an implementation that is efectively managed even brings these
challenges, a poor implementation can be disastrous and will cost the
organization much more time, energy, and money to get things back
on track.
Dorothy, the character from the movie Te Wizard of Oz, held
her composure pretty well through the tornado that ripped her from
a calm, stable life on the farm and threw her into a foreign world. She
was able to manage through the obstacles and challenges and stay the
course as she followed the yellow brick road in search of the wizard.
Some say this is similar to the experience users have, except for the
part when Dorothy wakes up from her dream and fnds herself back
home as she remembers it!
EMR implementations don’t have to be nightmarish for users, but
there certainly will be obstacles and challenges along the way. Te key is
to help users through the road blocks and enable them to experience a
2 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
positive journey. Tis process is always easier when people know what
they are getting into, feel supported, and are prepared for what lies
ahead, both good and bad. Tis is the role of change management.
CHANGE MANAGEMENT DEFINED
It’s important to understand why you should make an investment in
the people side of the project—bringing in the best technology pos-
sible doesn’t mean anything unless users are comfortable and prof-
cient in its use. Te truth is just because you build it doesn’t mean they
will come.
Let’s start by answering the two questions we are most ofen asked,
“What is change management anyway? What is it change managers
do?”
To avoid confusion we’ll say up front we are not talking about
change management as it relates to technical issues, such as version or
change control. We also want to be clear that change management is
not project management. What we are talking about is the human side
of electronic medical records implementations, the human-focused
work of engaging and preparing people to succeed in the new world
of EMRs.
A word about project management: while good project manage-
ment facilitates change management, the two disciplines are not the
same. Project management is much more linear and task-focused,
whereas change management deals with the complexities of human
behavior. But a good project plan creates a structure and a founda-
tion in which the change management process can occur. Terefore,
the two disciplines, though diferent, complement and support each
other.
A word of caution: do not confuse the project plan with the end
result. Te plan is necessary, and it guides you throughout the process.
Te plan is proactive; it’s the order in the chaos. But technology adop-
tion is kind of like herding cats; it’s unpredictable, and you need to
maintain fexibility to respond as things evolve. Tis is a more reactive
process than what may be expressed in a plan. In our experience, an
EMR implementation requires both structure and fexibility.
Tere is a saying in change management circles: When one door
closes another one opens, but sometimes it’s hell in the hallway. Change
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 3
management deals mostly with the hallway situation, facilitating the
human transition from the present to the future. Tese days, change is
ongoing and requires focused leadership if it is to be as fast and pain-
less as possible.
Te three legs of the project stool represent the critical compo-
nents of an implementation (Figure 1-1)—People, Process, and Tech-
nology. Te people are the most important! When technology projects
fail, it is primarily due to a lack of use and not a failure of the sof-
ware. Te focus of change management is people and the objective is
to change behavior. Tis is good for business because it accelerates the
change process so benefts are achieved faster. Change management
is not about being nice or placing an emphasis on feelings. It’s about
performance improvement and results.
If you search the literature, you will fnd a variety of defnitions of
human-focused change management. Tey all cover similar concepts,
sometimes using diferent terminology. Te simplest explanation of
change management is to say, “It’s all about the people!” But for the
purposes of this book, we expand on that concept and use the follow-
ing defnition of change management:
• A structured process designed to deal directly and intentionally
with the human factors involved in not just planning and imple-
menting an EMR but through behavior change, achieving the
anticipated benefts that justifed the project in the frst place.
• Desired behavior change is achieved by helping people understand
and internalize change and by preparing them to be successful
contributors in the future state. In the case of EMR implementa-
tions, efective change management delivers users who are willing
and able to use an EMR in a way that satisfes the requirements of
the job, the needs of the patient, and the health of the organization.
Key Tip
Our assumption is that the software you are implementing
works. If the software doesn’t work, you have another kind of
problem; one that even the best change management won’t
resolve.
Key Tip
Our assumption is that the software you are implementing
works. If the software doesn’t work, you have another kind of
problem—one that even the best change management won’t
resolve.
4 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
Well-designed, integrated, people-focused work builds logically
over time in a way that makes sense to the user. It brings users along,
guiding and supporting them so they arrive at where you want them
to be. Tis is about willingness and ability, hearts and minds. You must
have both!
Te overarching purpose of change management is to accelerate
the speed at which people move successfully through the change
process so that anticipated benefts are achieved faster. And there
are additional benefts to change management. Trough optimizing
the ef ciency and ef cacy of users, an efective EMR change manage-
ment program will also:
• Improve organizational outcomes and performance (efective use
of the system generates value to patients and the organization).
• Enhance employee satisfaction, morale, and engagement (when
people learn new skills, meet performance expectations, and con-
tribute to a greater good they feel pride in their accomplishments).
• Improve service quality (users feel valued and supported by an
organization that makes an investment in them; this positively
impacts how they treat patients).
Figure 1-1: The Three-legged Stool
Technology
People Process
Technology
People Process
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 5
• Help achieve hoped-for benefts (benefts that include EMR value
realization, reduction of errors, return on investment).
• Create higher levels of openness, trust, involvement, and teamwork
(develop an engaged workforce).
• Build change capability and capacity in the organization, resulting
in improved ability to respond quickly and efectively to new situa-
tions (create organizational nimbleness through embedded change
management knowledge, structure, and process).
In other words, it really is all about the people. Intentionally man-
aging the cultural, behavioral, and organizational changes that need
to take place to make the desired EMR future not only a reality but
a sustainable reality pays of on many levels in that it also facilitates
organizational transformation. Building on individual capability and
organizational capacity, change management results in a change-
capable culture—a huge advantage in today’s competitive and fast-
changing world.
Change Management, Technology Adoption—
What’s the Diference?
Tere are a number of terms that people use to refer to the work
involved in managing the people side of a change efort. We think of
change management as the mother ship, that is, the umbrella term that
embraces all specialties within the feld. Similar to the various special-
ties or domains of service within a healthcare system, change man-
agement professionals may choose specifc areas of focus. Technology
adoption, specifcally information technology (IT), is one such area,
and it involves the application of change management principles to the
implementation of IT. Te focus of this book is technology adoption,
and we will mostly use this term instead of change management
throughout the rest of the book.
Efective technology adoption professionals align themselves with
the operational/business side of the organization and tailor solutions
that drive behavioral change and tangible outcomes. Tey participate in
EMR implementation projects from the beginning, driving the people
side of change throughout and continuing to add value post-live as the
EMR becomes part of the central nervous system of the organization.
6 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PEOPLE SIDE
OF AN EMR IMPLEMENTATION
Tere are many references in the literature to failed change eforts and
IT implementations. Estimates are that only one third of these projects
achieve success, which means two thirds fail to meet expectations. Te
good news is that failure is optional, as much has been learned about
why some change eforts fail and others succeed.
Here’s the issue: while the change that is going to occur is an exter-
nal event—the EMR implementation, a reorganization, proposed out-
sourcing, a promotion, etc.—the transition from old to new that those
who are impacted experience is a psychological and emotional pro-
cess. It is this transition that is dif cult—even when a change is self-
imposed or considered positive.
In the words of William Bridges, a key thought leader in manage-
ment of transitions, “It isn’t the changes that do you in, it’s the transi-
tion afer the change that does!”
1
For an implementation team, part of the problem encountered
during transition is that change is messy: people start where they are,
not where we want them to be. And when considering the personnel
within a typical hospital, people can be all over the place in terms of
comfort with computers, stage in life, commitment to the organiza-
tion, fear of change, etc. Add to this the fact that for change to be suc-
cessful three things must occur. People:
• Must let go of their current reality; have an ending.
• Go through a confused period in-between (hell in the hallway).
• Only then can have a new beginning.
1
To take this a step further, while IT consultants want to install the
system and make enhancements, the users will ultimately determine
how the system is used. Tis use is afected by human, not technical,
factors:
• Diferent frames of reference, backgrounds, experiences with
technology.
• Organizational history and experience with other large-scale
change projects.
• Levels of resistance, fear, ability to deal with ambiguity.
• Degree of alignment of “What’s in it for me?” for the various stake-
holder groups.
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 7
• Inef ciencies uncovered because the system creates transparency.
• Workarounds that become quickly entrenched.
• Pressure to get through the day can override doing what is right.
• User work/life balance issues coming into play from the very
beginning.
All of these factors create problems for implementation teams that
just want to install technology! How do you efectively address the
people issues? Or is it easier to just install the technology and assume
that people will learn because they have to use it? Some on the imple-
mentation team may falsely assume that users of an EMR system will
snap into place over time and do what is right for the organization.
Tis thinking is a fool’s paradise.
In the foreword to this book, Dave Garets made the point that EMR
deployments are not about technology but about equipping organiza-
tions to reach critical business objectives by providing employees with
technical capabilities that make new things possible and by engaging
them in changing their behavior to efectively use the new capabilities
to generate desired results.
With all due respect to the technical side of an EMR implemen-
tation, installing the technology is only half the battle. Tis is not to
degrade the importance of the technology. Te fact that we spend a lot
of money researching technology, acquiring it, confguring it, install-
ing it, and supporting it speaks to its importance. If we weren’t imple-
menting EMRs, we wouldn’t even be having a discussion about EMR-
related change management!
8 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
But implementation of the technology is just a frst, and very nec-
essary, step—because in and of itself the technology does not generate
value. Te technology is necessary but not suf cient for beneft realiza-
tion to occur. To create value requires people, and this is why change
management is so important. Too much of a focus on technology, even
in the early stages, will create issues downstream. And even with the
best technology, if not used ef ciently, hoped-for benefts will be tough
to achieve.
CIO Perspective
“During my master's program I took an Organization Development
class that really opened my eyes to peoples’ needs during large-scale
change. Since the OD class I have been very interested in what makes
people tick and why people react in different ways to the same
environment. No matter how good of an idea a large-scale technology
implementation is, we will always have early adopters, average adopters
and laggards. As leaders within large organizations, we have a
responsibility to plan for, and respect, all types of technology adopters.
Ultimately the people who work within in our organizations want a positive
human experience when they are at work.
Utilizing a change management methodology enables the implementation
and leadership teams to provide a positive experience during the period of
significant change. By utilizing a solid change management methodology
the organization promotes team communication, a safer environment for
the patient, a work environment that promotes trust and an environment
where people are allowed to talk about the fear of change. All of this
promotes a better human experience and a much stronger work force.
…An effective change management program has meant the difference
between good go-lives and great go-lives at our 10 hospitals.”
Lindsey P. Jarrell, FACHE
SVP & CIO
BayCare Health System
Clearwater, FL
CIO Perspective
During my master's program I took an Organization Development
class that really opened my eyes to peoples’ needs during large-scale
change. Since the OD class I have been very interested in what makes
people tick and why people react in different ways to the same
environment. No matter how good of an idea a large-scale technology
implementation is, we will always have early adopters, average adopters
and laggards. As leaders within large organizations, we have a
responsibility to plan for, and respect, all types of technology adopters.
Ultimately the people who work within in our organizations want a positive
human experience when they are at work.
Utilizing a change management methodology enables the implementation
and leadership teams to provide a positive experience during the period of
significant change. By utilizing a solid change management methodology
the organization promotes team communication, a safer environment for
the patient, a work environment that promotes trust and an environment
where people are allowed to talk about the fear of change. All of this
promotes a better human experience and a much stronger work force.
…An effective change management program has meant the difference
between good go-lives and great go-lives at our 10 hospitals.
Lindsey P. Jarrell, FACHE
SVP & CIO
BayCare Health System
Clearwater, FL
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 9
Remember that change is a personal experience. It is also local and
individual. And it’s hard—even when it’s self-imposed and positive.
Tere are no shortcuts. People have to go through the process of change
in much the same way that we move through the stages of grief.
2
It can’t
be avoided or skipped. You can measure twice and cut once, or you
can cut now and then do costly remediation later. Either way, you can’t
avoid the expense or time required for real change to occur.
SYSTEMS PERSPECTIVE
Experienced technology adoption professionals embrace a systems
perspective when given the assignment to drive performance, man-
age perceptions, and increase the utilization of new and existing tech-
nology. A systems approach is the ability to see the big picture and
address the interrelationships among the variables within the fabric of
CIO Perspective
“I’ve been in healthcare IT a long time and I now realize it’s
all about change management. What was considered soft is
now hard. We know so much more about how to install
technology—It’s the people part we don’t know well yet,
and so it’s hard.”
Scott Joslyn
CIO
MemorialCare
Long Beach, CA
CIO Perspective
I’ve been in healthcare IT a long time and I now realize it’s
all about change management. What was considered soft is
now hard. We know so much more about how to install
technology—it’s the people part we don’t know well yet,
and so it’s hard.
J. Scott Joslyn
CIO
MemorialCare
Long Beach, CA
Quote
“”
“No man can think clearly when his fists are clenched.”
- George Jean Nathan
Quote
“” “”
“No man can think clearly when his fists are clenched.”
- George Jean Nathan
10 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
the organization and infuence the combined impact these variables
have on organizational efectiveness. As each variable has the power
to infuence the outcome of any intervention, behavior change is ofen
not sustainable because variables tend to work against one another.
Efective technology adoption strategies account for this interrelation-
ship/interdependency and aim to bring these variables into alignment
as a means for driving sustainable results.
Figure 1-2 introduces the Organizational Fabric Model, which
highlights the six primary threads (or variables) that are interwoven
in the fabric (or culture) of an organization. Te model suggests that
all six threads must work in concert to successfully shape the organi-
zational fabric. A well-woven technology adoption plan strategically
manipulates these threads to infuence desired change. A poorly woven
plan, in which a thread or combination of threads is not accounted
for, leads to disaster or, by way of analogy, will hit a snag down the
road. Depending on the fexibility and durability of this fabric, a snag
can result in a huge hole that detracts from the overall strength of the
intervention. Te intent of the Organizational Fabric Model is to stress
how important it is to understand the future state, recognize how each
variable or combination of variables will come into play, and develop a
sound technology adoption program that appropriately infuences this
set of variables to reshape the fabric or culture, so desired change can
actually take place.
Te Organizational Fabric Model will be revisited in subsequent
chapters as each thread or variable is explored in further detail. For
now, we reiterate that technology adoption strategies must not rely
on only one or two threads to drive behavior change. Sustainable out-
comes result from an organization’s ability to leverage the combination
of all six threads, working in concert, to create an environment for
success.
Key Point
Fundamentally, culture is “the way we do things around here.”
Key Point
Fundamentally, culture is “the way we do things around here.”
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 11
CREATING AN ENVIRONMENT FOR SUCCESS
Technology adoption is about creating a context, an environment, in
which change can be achieved and sustained over the long term. Tis
involves two levels—organizational and individual.
With an EMR implementation, the organization must create the
supporting environment, provide needed training and resources,
articulate a clear direction coupled with clear expectations, engage its
people, include them in the process, and reinforce desired new behav-
iors. Tis is not about checking things of a list, but rather about fnd-
ing synergy among impacted groups, giving them what they need, and
coordinating eforts to meet the end goal. It’s an ongoing efort.
To give you an idea of what we are talking about, here’s an exam-
ple of an individual situation occurring within a social context. Tink
about what happens when you want to make a signifcant change in
your personal life—quit smoking, stop drinking, lose weight. It’s one
thing to talk with a doctor or another professional about what needs
to happen when you’re in their of ce, but once you leave the of ce
you then return to your social reality. If your friends and family don’t
want your behavior to change, you will have a tough time. All the rein-
Figure 1-2: Organizational Fabric Model
Sponsorship
Stakeholder Mgmt
Training
Vision
Reinforcement
Communications
Sponsorship
Stakeholder Mgmt
Training
Vision
Reinforcement
Communications
12 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
forcements and temptations will conspire to prevent you from mak-
ing changes. But, if you can get some important people in your life
to make the changes with you, or at least support you in the process,
you have a much greater chance of success. Te lesson is don’t send a
changed person back into an unchanged environment if you want
to see behavior change!
Engaging individuals involves arousing two key aspects —willing-
ness and ability. Te organization must infuence both in order to suc-
ceed. With the help of the Skill Versus Will Matrix (Figure 1-3), think
about it this way:
• When people want to do something but don’t know how, they can’t
(willing/unable).
• When people know how, but don’t want to, they won’t
(able/unwilling).
Can you think of examples in your own life when you have been in
either of these situations?
Consider the circumstance of people who know how to do some-
thing, but don’t want to do it. Tis is a “will” not a “skill” issue, and it is
a very common technology adoption dilemma. If the amount of work
and efort involved are not perceived by the user as being equal to the
Figure 1-3: The Skill versus Will Matrix
Skill
Will
WON’T
WON’T
DOES
CAN’T Low
High
High Low
Skill
Will
WON’T
WON’T
DOES
CAN’T Low
High
High Low High Low
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 13
return or value experienced through the implementation, the user will
most likely choose to reduce the efort. A goal of an efective people-
focused strategy is to identify potential areas of disconnect and fnd
ways to increase the perceived value to users. Te assumption is that
when the return is perceived to be greater, the efort increases. When
there are no incentives to try harder, it may be dif cult to drive desired
behavior change.
Te point in getting users to actively support the deployment of
an EMR is about a lot more than a communication plan or feature/
function training. Managing the people side of an EMR implementa-
tion requires a savvy technology adoption plan that ties sponsorship,
training, communication, workfow harmonization, user support and
reinforcement with the business priorities of the organization and
efectively coordinates all of these activities with the user in mind—in
an environment that reinforces desired behavior changes.
Key Questions
?
Two key ques tions to remember throughout the
project are…
(1) How will this decision impact the user?
(2) How might it impact patients?
Key Questions
??
Two key questions to remember throughout the
project are
(1) How will this decision impact the user?
(2) How might it impact patients?
14 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
Consider this example:
In this example, what are the key elements of this process that
ensure success?
• Te picture of success, the desired outcome, is clear—it is for the
child to become a functioning adult in the community.
• How this happens is clearly defned in behavioral terms. Tere is a
process that is known and understood by the entire community,
including children.
• Leaders at all levels in the community agree on the desired out-
come, support the entire process, and actively fulfll their roles
to ensure success. Leaders include village elders and formal lead-
ers, parents of the children, informal opinion leaders, and family
members.
• Te children who are about to become adults take an active role
in their own transformation, taking responsibility for their suc-
cess. Tey receive guidance and counsel from elders. Tey know
and understand the transformation process and what they must do
to achieve their new status. Goals and steps are clear. Tey also
understand the consequences of not successfully transitioning to
adulthood.
• If there is more than one child slated to go through transformation
to adulthood at the same time they are a peer group and as appro-
priate, prepare together and support each other.
Key Point
In native cultures, there tend to be rites of passage that serve
to transition a person from childhood to adult status in the
community. The child may actually leave the village for a day or
two of contemplation, following a prescribed process. When the
child returns he or she is redefined as an adult and assumes
the consequent privileges and responsibilities. The entire
community reinforces the person’s new status; the new adult is
not allowed to return to being a child whenever it’s convenient,
but is supported to complete the transformation to adulthood.
The change to adulthood does not happen in a vacuum but is
part of a carefully designed process that ensures success.
Key Point
In native cultures, there tend to be rites of passage that serve
to transition a person from childhood to adult status in the
community. The child may actually leave the village for a day or
two of contemplation, following a prescribed process. When the
child returns he or she is redefined as an adult and assumes
the consequent privileges and responsibilities. The entire
community reinforces the person’s new status; the new adult is
not allowed to return to being a child whenever it’s convenient,
but is supported to complete the transformation to adulthood.
The change to adulthood does not happen in a vacuum but is
part of a carefully designed process that ensures success.
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 15
• Te entire community works together to bring about the
transformation.
• Success results in positive reinforcement.
Te environmental context is the trump card in any implementer’s
hand. It takes a lot of work to create a suitable environment, but it is an
essential ingredient in being able to drive and sustain change.
Willingness and Ability
Earlier we mentioned willingness and ability as key concepts in tech-
nology adoption. Willingness and ability can also be thought of as
hearts and minds, or will and skill. Te point is the same regardless
of the terms used. People need to be supported on both an emotional
level, to commit, and on an intellectual level, to be able. Te question
to be answered is, “What are the conditions under which users will
accept and adopt the EMR?”
Let’s talk about willingness frst.
Willingness, or hearts, is the commitment to go forward. Tis is
impacted by many things including the following elements:
• Leadership: Perceived support, or lack of support, for the change
from senior executives in the company, the cascade of sponsors
down through the organization, and, just as importantly, from the
employee’s direct supervisor.
• Communication: Quality and frequency of verbal and written
messages that describe the desired future state: tell why the change
needs to happen and what will happen if change isn’t made, set
clear expectations, explain how the company will prepare and sup-
port people to success, and describe local details such as timelines,
etc.
• Reinforcement: Degree of appropriateness and timeliness of
rewards for demonstrating desired new behaviors and conse-
quences for sticking to the old ways.
• Participation: Degree to which users are involved, every step of
the way, either directly as individuals or indirectly by being efec-
tively represented by trusted local opinion leader peers who serve
as liaisons between users and the project team.
• Organizational History with Change: Previous organizational
experience with change—good and bad—will infuence user per-
16 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
ceptions and expectations of the EMR implementation. Under-
standing the past is important in planning for the future.
Tis all sounds logical but the reaction to it can be emotional. Tis
is where people confront their fear of failure, feeling stupid, making
mistakes, etc. Remember that the change may require people to give
up the very things that they believe made them successful in the past.
Tis can be a dif cult sell.
Ability, or minds, is about the actual capability to successfully
meet new job expectations. Tis is impacted by many things including
the following elements:
• Training and Support: In most cases, the new EMR abilities must
be learned. An efective training program that is role-based and
intentionally focused on preparing people to perform new job
expectations is key. Just discussing desired outcomes is not enough
though; we have to clearly tell people what we want them to do.
Tis requires an intellectual understanding of what and how; a
conceptual understanding is necessary but not suf cient. Most
people need to practice something new to develop competence and
confdence. Safe opportunities to practice, preferably with immedi-
ate feedback, are very important to profciency development and
sustainability.
Getting people to move in the direction you want is the dif -
culty—some say the hardest part of the whole project. And if you agree
that people are the foundation of success—that beneft realization is
dependant, not on technology, but on people agreeing to go through
personal disruption, learn new things, change established patterns and
confront their fears—then we must be proactive and courageous in
addressing the human issues.
Tis is the people side of the project. Tis is the organizational read-
iness function. It involves collaboration, coordination and sequencing
of activities, information and events from all people-focused areas. Te
idea is to have all the people-focused functions working together to
reach clearly defned, shared outcomes. Te organizational readiness
plan to create individual and organizational readiness is the umbrella
that connects it all—the glue that holds it together and the grease that
makes it work—for the user. We will address the structure and process
for doing this in more detail in subsequent chapters.
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 17
Good News on Two Fronts
1. Tere is a social science! Tere is a body of work, research and
subsequent publications about the human experience with change.
Tere are proven change management strategies, tools, and tech-
niques. Tis isn’t folklore, hooey, or black magic. Te transition
process is known and predictable. Tere is a change curve that
describes the steps (Chapter 5, Stakeholder Management). And
though there is no silver bullet, it isn’t rocket science. Senior
healthcare executives must take the emerging profession of change
management/technology adoption seriously. Not understanding it
is no excuse for ignoring it. Tat is far too expensive an option.
2. All people go through transition when change—good or bad—
happens, in both their personal and professional life. You can’t
avoid it. Te wonderful thing is if you learn about change and
transition at work, it will improve your personal life. Tis is one
of the times to “try this at home!” We’re all human—at work and
at home. So treat your people as the humans they are, and avoid
some predictable expense and dif culty. Lead your organization
to a successful outcome, and speed up the process by treating your
staf as customers frst.
Don’t make the mistake of glossing over the critical human aspects
of change. Hire experts and fnd the emotionally intelligent people in
your organization who want to participate. And remember, you can
install technology without your people, but you can’t fully implement
and achieve return on investment without them. Consciously choose
to move fear and resistance to trust and adoption. It’s a case of pay
now or pay later. If you wait until later, it will always cost more. Tech-
nology Adoption is expensive but not as expensive as trying to gloss
it over and then having to undo the damage. When failure happens, it
Quote
“”
“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that
counts can be counted.”
- Albert Einstein
Quote
“” “”
“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that
counts can be counted.”
- Albert Einstein
18 Change Management Strategies for an Efective EMR Implementation
takes a long time for people to re-engage. And in today’s world, this
presents real problems for healthcare organizations faced with short-
ages in many professions. Tere is a huge risk of alienating and poten-
tially losing needed staf or in causing long delays. We can do better.
Not so long ago, it wasn’t conventional wisdom that clinical application
rollouts are not IT projects. More frequently than not, these were consid-
ered technical projects in which the point of celebration was when con-
nection from workstation to central processor was reliable and wireless
access actually worked. Te classic IT People-Process-Technology trian-
gle never got much past Technology to the real hard work on the People-
Process axis. Tat has all changed in the 21st century; system implemen-
tations that are both successful and valuable have had people and process
on the front burner.
When MemorialCare embarked on a fve-hospital roll-out of an
EMR in 2002, it had several things in its favor:
• Te technology the organization ultimately acquired was robust and
reliable; it worked.
• It had 15 years’ experience with CPOE (computerized provider
order entry). Terefore, although unevenly adopted, it was not new
territory.
• It had had the experience of a system-wide roll-out and standard-
ization on a general fnance, human resources, and materials man-
agement system. When all was said and done, users had not been
suf ciently involved, standardization fell short because involvement
was low, business leadership was difuse, and IT ownership was too
high. It was judged successful overall, but the organization continues
to move slowly forward with an underutilized set of applications.
With this experience and the insights of others, MemorialCare pri-
oritized engagement of physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and other staf.
Well before fnancial commitment to a new system was obtained, Memo-
rialCare hired a “Care Planning Executive,” a person whose full-time
Chapter 1: Te Business Case for Change Management 19
activities were devoted to the project, frst to help understand the drivers
of a new system, scope out the territory to be covered, gain the com-
mitment of senior leaders, as well as governance, and outline the case
for change. At my insistence, the Care Planning Executive, a registered
nurse and former hospital chief operating of cer, joined the organization,
reporting to the system-wide CEO, as a peer and partner of the CIO, not
a staf member, and a peer to the CEOs of each medical center campus.
Tat dedication alone made clear the commitment, intentions, and over-
all priority of the company.
Among several other critical success factors—and the outcome was
a success—was the overall employee engagement program that the Care
Planning Executive established. In summary, it was an education, mar-
keting, and training program dedicated to equipping the afected staf
with the knowledge and tools to embrace unavoidable change. Staf com-
munication was clear that it wasn’t change for change’s sake but a major
move forward in the paperless way care would be delivered and work-
fows would be streamlined. Of course, at the time, no one could have
foreseen later moves by government to push everyone in this direction
(with the American Recovery and Reconstruction Act of 2009). Because
of our early eforts, we’re now very well positioned.
J. Scott Joslyn
CIO
MemorialCare
Long Beach, California
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About the Book
Despite the promise of improving care and other bene?ts, EMR implementations are highly disruptive to the
organization. This book prepares you to lead or participate successfully in change management/technology
adoption efforts, so that meaningful use of EMRs can be achieved. The authors provide successful strategies
to plan and implement change. The content is based on their decades of combined experience designing
and leading technology adoption programs.
Sections of the book deal with establishing a foundation for change, building commitment, and developing
requisite skill in helping users be successful with technology. The book includes numerous lessons learned,
tips for success, best practices and case studies from organizations that have handled change well.
About the Authors
Claire McCarthy, MA, is a recognized technology adoption strategist and leader
with 25 years of healthcare industry experience supporting people through software
implementations and other large-scale change efforts. As Director of Organizational
Effectiveness for Kaiser Permanente’s enterprise-wide EMR deployment, Ms. McCarthy
led a national community of practice focused on preparing users to assume new
roles and responsibilities in support of organizational objectives. Ms. McCarthy
speaks internationally on the topic of technology adoption, encouraging healthcare
leaders around the globe to set the stage for bene?t realization by investing in the
people side of EMR implementation.
Douglas Eastman, PhD, is an organizational development executive with extensive
experience managing large-scale change initiatives. With more than 20 years
of consulting experience, Dr. Eastman’s focus is to help organizations grow and
manage change by unleashing human potential. His specialties are organizational
transformation, technology adoption and optimization, process redesign, strategic
planning, and program and tools development. As the Executive Director of Technology
Adoption and Organizational Capability within the Kaiser Permanente IT Care
Delivery Business Information Of?ce, Dr. Eastman has pioneered several of Kaiser’s
implementation readiness tools/methodologies and post-live optimization strategies/
programs, adding to the organization’s ability to realize the bene?t of its technology.
About HIMSS
The Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) is a comprehensive healthcare-
stakeholder membership organization exclusively focused on providing global leadership for the optimal
use of information technology (IT) and management systems for the betterment of healthcare. Founded in
1961 with of?ces in Chicago, Washington D.C., Brussels, Singapore, and other locations across the United
States, HIMSS represents more than 23,000 individual members, of which 73% work in patient care delivery
settings. HIMSS also includes over 380 corporate members and nearly 30 not-for-pro?t organizations that
share our mission of transforming healthcare through the effective use of information technology and
management systems. HIMSS frames and leads healthcare public policy and industry practices through
its educational, professional development, and advocacy initiatives designed to promote information and
management systems’ contributions to ensuring quality patient care.
ISBN: 978-0-9821070-6-5
Order Code: 564
230 E. Ohio St., Suite 500
Chicago, IL 60611–3270
312-915-9295
www.himss.org
Claire McCarthy, MA
Douglas Eastman, PhD
Contributing Editor
David E. Garets, FHIMSS
Change Management
Strategies for an
Effective EMR
Implementation
doc_676221919.pdf