Increase Effectiveness with Checklists
Legacy signals
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- Information must be simple and brief, measureable and transmittable, and effective.
- The team must communicate, not merely obey, or do their piece. In the operating room (where previously most members of the team did not even know one another’s names), it means individuals introduce themselves, name their role, and state their perspective conce ing the case. In construction, it’s every trade sitting at the table to discuss needs and problems. With this simple practice the “activation phenomenon” engages. That’s when people feel a sense of participation, and therefore responsibility from the beginning, not only at a critical moment.
- All team members have the right to alert another (regardless of rank) when a certain procedure is not being followed.
- Brief: Ideally one page with five to nine items (about all the memory can handle).
- Easy to Use: Even in the most challenging situations--in operating rooms it is pasted to the wall. On airplanes they are in binders.
- Address Only Critical Steps: What to do if the plane loses altitude, not how to fly a plane.
- Practical: Sets priorities, forces people into actions they already know, helps manage complexity.
- Read-Do: Meaning it tells you what steps to take, or Do-Confirm making you confirm you addressed something. Situation and experience determines format.
- Full of Pause Points: Places where you stop, assess, and make sure everything else is still okay.
- Language of the Profession.
- Forgettable Items: But not tasks that never are overlooked. Remind nurses to count sponges not to use sponges.
- Field Tested: Under very similar conditions—like a simulator in a pilot training center or beta tested in the field.
- Mandatory: No optional use or redesigning.
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