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Evidence-Based Decision Making If doctors can do it... administrators can do it? NVZD Voorjaarscongres – 4 Juni 2015 - Nyenrode
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Page 1: Evidence-Based Decision Making for Hospital Administrators

Evidence-Based Decision Making

If doctors can do it... administrators can do it?

NVZD Voorjaarscongres – 4 Juni 2015 - Nyenrode

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Exercise

Think about a decision you have been involved in making. This decision should be one which: Was reasonably important for your organizationInvolved spending significant resourcesInvolved several or more peopleWas made over a period of time (ie. weeks or months)Did not have an easy ‘answer’

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Exercise

Discuss with your neighbor (1 min)

What exactly was the problem (or opportunity)?

How many alternative decision options were considered?

How much evidence was used, and from which sources (scientific, organizational, experience, crystal ball?)

Was any attempt made to explicitly evaluate its quality or trustworthiness?

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Evidence based decision-making:

What is it?

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Evidence-based decision making

Central Premise:

Decisions should be based on a

combination of critical thinking and

the ‘best available evidence‘.

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Evidence?

outcome of scientific research,

organizational facts & figures,

benchmarking, best practices,

personal experience

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All managers and leaders

base their decisions on

‘evidence’

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But…many managers and

leaders pay little or no

attention to the quality of the

evidence they base their

decisions on

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Trust me, 20 years of management experience

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SO ...

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Teach managers/leaders

how to critically evaluate the

validity, and generalizability of

the evidence and help them

find ‘the best available’

evidence

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Evidence based decision

Professional experience and

judgment

Organizational data, facts and figures

Stakeholders’ values and concerns

Scientific research

outcomes

AskAcquire

AppraiseAggregate

ApplyAssess

diagnosis intervention

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Evidence based practice:

Where does it come from?

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McMaster University Medical School, Canada

Medicine: Founding fathers

David Sackett Gordon Guyatt

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How it all started

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1. Ask: translate a practical issue into an answerable question

2. Acquire: systematically search for and retrieve the evidence

3. Appraise: critically judge the trustworthiness of the evidence

4. Apply: incorporate the evidence into the decision-making process

5. Assess: evaluate the outcome of the decision taken

5 steps of EBmed

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Evidence-Based Practice

1991Medicine

1998Education

2000Social care, public policy

Nursing, Criminal justice,

Policing, Architecture, Conservation

2010Management

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Evidence-Based Practice

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Evidence-Based Practice

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Evidence-Based Practice

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Evidence-Based Practice

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Evidence-based decision-making =

the use of evidence from multiple sources to increase the likelihood of a

favourable outcome

Focus on the decision making processThink in terms of probability

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Evidence-Based Decision-Making

Why do we need it?

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1. Incompetent people benefit more from feedback than

highly competent people.

2. Task conflict improves work group performance while

relational conflict harms it.

3. Encouraging employees to participate in decision

making is more effective for improving organizational

performance than setting performance goals.

True or false?

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How evidence-based is your HR director?

959 (US) + 626 (Dutch) HR professionals

35 statements, based on an extensive body of

evidence

true / false / uncertain

HR Professionals' beliefs about effective human resource practices: correspondence between research and practice, (Rynes et al, 2002, Sanders et al 2008)

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Outcome: not better than random chance

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Evidence-based decision making

Professional experience and

judgment

Organizational data, facts and figures

Stakeholders’ values and concerns

Scientific research

outcomes

AskAcquire

AppraiseAggregate

ApplyAssess

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Thinking critical about

professional experience and judgment

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Discuss with your neighbor (1 min)

Why is a physician’s clinical experience,

as a rule, more trustworthy than

a manager’s professional experience?

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Developing expertise

1. A sufficiently regular, predictable environment

2. Opportunities to learn regularities through prolonged

practice and feedback

The management domain is not highly favorable to expertise!

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Bounded rationality

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Bounded rationality / prospect theory

System 1

Fast Intuitive, associative heuristics & biases

System 2

Slow (lazy) Deliberate, Reasoning Rational

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System 1: short cuts

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Shepard’s tables

System 1: short cuts

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System 1: necessary to survive

95%

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Seeing order in randomness Overconfidence bias Halo effect False consensus effect Group think Self serving attribution bias Sunk cost fallacy Cognitive dissonance reduction

System 1: cognitive errors

Confirmation bias Authority bias Small numbers fallacy In-group bias Recall bias Anchoring bias Availability bias

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1. Pattern recognition

2. Confirmation-bias

3. Groupthink

Cognitive errors

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We are predisposed to see order, pattern and causal relations in the world.

Patternicity: The tendency to find meaningful patterns in both meaningful and meaningless noise.

Error 1: pattern recognition

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We are pattern seeking primates: association learning

Bias 1: pattern recognition

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Points of impact of V-1 bombs in London

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Points of impact of V-1 bombs in London

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A Type I error or a false positive, is believing a pattern is real when it is not (finding a non existent pattern)

A Type II error or a false negative, is not believing a pattern is real when it is (not recognizing a real pattern)

Dr. Michael Shermer (Director of the Skeptics Society)

Error 1: pattern recognition

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A Type I error or a false positive: believe that the rustle in the grass is a dangerous predator when it is just the wind (low cost)

Error 1: pattern recognition

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A Type II error or a false negative: believe that the rustle in the grass is just the wind when it is a dangerous predator (high cost)

Error 1: pattern recognition

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A Type I error or a false positive: believe that the rustle in the grass is a dangerous predator when it is just the wind (low cost)

A Type II error or a false negative: believe that the rustle in the grass is just the wind when it is a dangerous predator (high cost)

DEFAULT

Error 1: pattern recognition

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superstitious rituals

superstitious rituals

more stress = more prone to type 1 errors

Error 1: pattern recognition

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Error 1: pattern recognition

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1. Pattern recognition

2. Confirmation-bias

3. Groupthink

Cognitive errors

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We are predisposed to selectively

search for or interpret information in

ways that confirms our existing beliefs,

expectations and assumptions, and

ignore information to the contrary.

In other words, we “see what we want to see”

2. Confirmation bias

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Example

You may believe that astrology actually

works. As a result of confirmation bias

you’ll remember only those instances

when when the prediction in the astrology

column came true and forget the majority

of the cases when the prediction was very

wrong. As a result you will continue to

believe astrology has some base in reality

2. Confirmation bias

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Confirmation bias

Pattern recognition

Error 2: confirmation bias

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McKinsey (1997 case study / 2001 book)

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McKinsey: case study

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War on Talent

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1. Pattern recognition

2. Confirmation-bias

3. Groupthink

Errors

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Groupthink:

Groupthink is a psychological phenomenon that occurs within a group of people, in which the desire for harmony or conformity in the group results in an incorrect or irrational decision

Error 3: Groupthink

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Bias 3: Group think

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Error 3: Groupthink

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Lean Management / Lean Six Sigma

Self steering / autonomous teams

Agile working / New World of Working

Value based management / health care

Talent management

Employee engagement

Group think?

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“I’ve been studying judgment for 45 years, and I’m no better than when I started. I make extreme predictions. I’m over-

confident. I fall for every one of the biases.”

Bounded rationality

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Evidence based decision

Professional experience and

judgment

Organizational data, facts and figures

Stakeholders’ values and concerns

Scientific research

outcomes

AskAcquire

AppraiseAggregate

ApplyAssess

diagnosis intervention

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Evidence-based decision making

Professional experience and

judgment

Stakeholders’ values and concerns

Scientific research

outcomes

AskAcquire

AppraiseAggregate

ApplyAssess

Organizational data, facts and figures

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People operate with beliefs &

biases. To the extent you can

reduce both and replace them

with data, you gain a clear

competitive advantage

Laszlo Bock (CHRO Google)

Organizational data

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1. financial data (cash flow, solvability)

2. business outcomes (ROI, market share)

3. customer/client impact (customer satisfaction)

4. performance indicators (occupancy rate, failure frequency)

5. HR metrics (absenteeism, employee engagement)

6. marketing intelligence (brand awareness, customer feedback)

7. ‘soft’ data (organizational culture, trust in senior management, leadership style, commitment)

8. data from benchmarking

Types organizational evidence

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Organizational facts and figures

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Examples

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Can your organization correlate/regress

level of education

years of experience

productivity

customer satisfaction

failure frequency

employee satisfaction

employee turnover

absenteeism

+

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Trends

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“Where the evidence is strong, we should act on it.

Where the evidence is suggestive, we should consider it.

Where the evidence is weak, we should build the

knowledge to support better decisions in the future.”

Jeffrey Zients, acting director of the Office of Management and Budget and President Obama’s Economic Advisor

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In the next weeks, before you make a decision, ask yourself:

What exactly is the problem?

What is the evidence available?

Was any attempt made to explicitly evaluate its trustworthiness?