Viral Healthcare

Ep 13: The Healthcare Initiative Everyone Loved, And Why It Still Failed

18 min · 26 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Ep 13: The Healthcare Initiative Everyone Loved, And Why It Still Failed

Descripción

Why do so many healthcare initiatives sound successful long before they actually improve outcomes?  In this episode, Bruce Spurlock explores the story of the UP Campaign, a quality improvement initiative introduced across 1,700 hospitals in 2016 that attempted to simplify patient care while reducing the growing burden of endless checklists, risk assessments, and competing quality projects placed on frontline nurses.  The campaign centered around three simple ideas:  * Wake Up — reducing oversedation   * Get Up — promoting mobility and strength   * Soap Up — improving hand hygiene   Conceptually, the initiative resonated immediately with nurses, administrators, and hospital leaders. The messaging was simple, memorable, and patient-centered. National meetings, webinars, statewide presentations, and journals all helped spread the campaign quickly.  But implementation revealed a much harder reality.  * Who actually owned the work?  * What operational changes were required?  * What measures defined success?  * What happens when organizations add new initiatives without removing old responsibilities?  Bruce reflects on how the UP Campaign became a valuable lesson in healthcare implementation, operational design, measurement, and the difference between a compelling idea and a sustainable system.  Topics include:  * Healthcare quality improvement   * Hospital operations   * Nursing workload and checklist fatigue   * Healthcare implementation challenges   * Process design in healthcare   * Operational accountability   * Patient mobility and oversedation   * Healthcare innovation failures   * Measurement and outcomes in healthcare   A candid conversation about why healthcare organizations often struggle to translate good ideas into durable operational change.  ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

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30 episodios

Portada del episodio Ep 17: The ABCDEF Bundle and the Problem with Success

Ep 17: The ABCDEF Bundle and the Problem with Success

Bruce Spurlock explores why the ABCDEF Bundle became one of healthcare's most successful improvement initiatives—and what it teaches us about how organizations define success.    The ABCDEF Bundle is widely considered one of the most successful quality improvement initiatives in modern healthcare.  But what exactly made it successful?  In this episode, Bruce Spurlock uses the ABCDEF Bundle as a case study to explore a larger leadership question: how should healthcare organizations define success?  The bundle brought together six evidence-based practices focused on pain management, sedation, delirium prevention, early mobility, ventilator liberation, and family engagement. While each component had merit on its own, the real achievement was creating a framework that changed behavior, improved patient outcomes, and sustained implementation over time.  Bruce examines why some healthcare initiatives generate awareness but fail to create lasting impact, while others become deeply embedded in everyday clinical practice. The conversation explores the difference between adoption, participation, implementation, outcomes, and sustainability, and why healthcare leaders often celebrate success too early.  Topics include:  * The ABCDEF Bundle   * ICU quality improvement   * Delirium prevention   * Healthcare implementation   * Measuring success   * Leadership and accountability   * Quality improvement strategy   * Healthcare innovation   * Sustainable change in healthcare   A thoughtful discussion about what success really means—and why defining it correctly may be one of the most important leadership responsibilities in healthcare.  ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

Ayer19 min
Portada del episodio Ep 16: What Separates Durable Change from Innovation Theater? A Conversation with Maulik S. Joshi

Ep 16: What Separates Durable Change from Innovation Theater? A Conversation with Maulik S. Joshi

Healthcare leaders are often told to move faster, innovate more, and stay ahead of change. But how do you know when you're creating meaningful transformation versus simply participating in innovation theater?  In this episode of Viral Healthcare, Bruce Spurlock sits down with healthcare executive and public health leader Maulik S. Joshi, Dr.P.H., President and CEO of Meritus Health. Together, they explore what organizational agility really looks like in healthcare, why some organizations successfully implement change while others struggle, and what leaders can learn from periods of rapid transformation like COVID-19.  This conversation covers healthcare innovation, leadership, implementation, organizational culture, decision-making, and the practical realities of creating sustainable change in complex healthcare systems.  Whether you're a healthcare executive, physician leader, quality professional, or innovation strategist, this episode offers valuable lessons on balancing speed, execution, and long-term impact.  ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

16 de jun de 202623 min
Portada del episodio Reflection: The Value of Thinking About Failure

Reflection: The Value of Thinking About Failure

A few days after discussing the pre-mortem framework, Bruce Spurlock reflects on one of its most important lessons: organizations often spend far more time planning for success than preparing for failure.  In this short reflection, Bruce explores why leaders naturally gravitate toward optimism, why difficult conversations become harder once momentum builds around an idea, and how structured dissent can improve decision-making without slowing progress.  The pre-mortem is not about pessimism. It is about creating the conditions for better thinking. By imagining failure before implementation begins, leaders can surface hidden risks, challenge assumptions, and improve the quality of strategic decisions.  Topics include:  * Leadership and decision-making   * Optimism bias   * Psychological safety   * Organizational learning   * Strategic planning   * Risk management   * Dissent and innovation   * Healthcare leadership   A thoughtful reflection on why anticipating failure may be one of the most effective ways to improve success.  ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

12 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio Ep. 15: The Pre-Mortem: How Smart Leaders Plan for Failure

Ep. 15: The Pre-Mortem: How Smart Leaders Plan for Failure

Most organizations spend far more time discussing why a project will succeed than why it might fail.  In this episode, Bruce Spurlock takes a deep dive into the pre-mortem, a decision-making framework developed by Gary Klein and popularized by Daniel Kahneman that helps organizations identify risks before they become expensive mistakes.  Unlike traditional planning exercises, the pre-mortem assumes the project has already failed and asks participants to work backward to explain why. The process creates space for dissent, surfaces hidden risks, challenges optimism bias, and often uncovers operational concerns that would otherwise remain invisible until implementation.  Bruce explores:  * The psychology behind the pre-mortem   * Why organizations struggle to discuss failure   * How pre-mortems uncover unknown unknowns   * The role of psychological safety   * Why dissent improves decision quality   * How to structure an effective pre-mortem   * Common mistakes that make pre-mortems ineffective   * Leadership lessons from anticipating failure   A practical discussion about better decision-making, risk management, and how healthcare leaders can improve outcomes by examining failure before it happens.  ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

9 de jun de 202614 min
Portada del episodio Ep 14: How Personality Shapes Leadership, Innovation, and Change with Dr. Lee Scheinbart

Ep 14: How Personality Shapes Leadership, Innovation, and Change with Dr. Lee Scheinbart

Why do some leaders embrace change while others resist it?  Why do some people focus on the big picture while others need every detail before making a decision?  In the first interview episode of Viral Healthcare, Bruce Spurlock is joined by physician executive, leadership coach, and former Chief Medical Officer Dr. Lee Scheinbart for a conversation about the human side of leadership and decision-making.  Drawing on decades of experience as an oncologist, health system executive, educator, and executive coach, Dr. Scheinbart explores how personality, worldview, and professional training influence the way leaders evaluate risk, process information, and respond to innovation.  The discussion covers:  * "Lumpers" versus "splitters" in decision-making   * How physicians are trained to think differently than executives   * Risk tolerance and leadership behavior   * Self-awareness and executive growth   * Why innovation often requires different thinking styles   * Consensus, accountability, and trust   * The role of authenticity in leadership   * How leaders can adapt their decision-making approach to different situations   Bruce and Lee also explore why understanding your own thinking patterns may be one of the most important leadership skills in healthcare today.  A thoughtful conversation about leadership, organizational behavior, innovation, and the psychology behind decision-making.  ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

2 de jun de 202625 min