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What it's like being a Trainee Improvement Advisor - Emma and Sheena…
What it's like being a Trainee Improvement Advisor - Emma and Sheena
What Motivated Us to Apply
Completing an Improvement Project through ASPIRE gave us a taste for Improvement work - we both loved this
Supporting improvement from the ground up - still working clinically with time out to improve our area with coaching support
Being part of positive changes for the future
Opportunities for career progression for the future
Challenging ourselves to reach out of our comfort zones
A Day in the Life of...
Flexible timetable - stark contrast to rigid clinics
Shadowing the IA's - across Risk, Acute, Womens and Childrens and mental health
Our own improvement projects
SCIL work
SIS work
Facilitating at presentations/other courses about QI
Networking to meet wider teams in NHS D&G
Promoting Quality, Safety and Improvement in our substantive posts
Improvement methodology - putting into practice
Meetings for Quality, Safety and Risk and Improvement
Being involved in other steering groups - eg: Falls, pressure ulcers, anticipatory care planning
Working in the wider team with admin, and project officers
Working with the education centre to raise awareness and promote
Attending the daily safety huddle
Learning to date...
National and International Improvement work
What works well elsewhere/ in the past - and how we can build on this
Where to start with a project - structure and questions to ask
The Model for Improvement - how this can be applied to any idea for improvement
Communication styles and techniques
Insights into Corporate responsibilities around Risk
Data analysis
How best to motivate people and engage with teams
Quality Improvement Methodology and Tools
Being part of lots of ongoing work and not necessarily seeing fully from start to finish
Adjusting to less structured days
Learning how complex health and social care systems are
Stand outs for us
Sheena
DATIX reports on Insulin adverse events
Complexity of sharing electronic documents across health and social care
Understanding the interactions of health an social care
Amazed at the number of project going on across the region
Engaging with key team members whilst appreciating the psychology and culture
Data can be so useful but need to consider your audience - is it meaningful to them :smile:
Emma
For me opening my eyes outside of the bubble of physiotherapy :explode:
Changing my attitudes towards how simple decisions are often much more complex, and to be less defeatist with barriers!
Change is not quick, but that's ok and we need to make mistakes to learn - PDSA :recycle:
Change can be very small, and make a huge difference