Problem Identification and Problem Solving.pptx

DadaRobert 13 views 42 slides Aug 31, 2024
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About This Presentation

RCA


Slide Content

Problem Identification and Problem Solving

Session outline Problem identification steps Problem solving steps Plan-Do-Check-Act methodology for root cause analysis

Key terms

Example: Identifying The Underlying Public Health Problem In a city, women in Neighborhood A were getting adequate prenatal care, but women in Neighborhood B were not. However, the neighborhoods had the same risk factors for not getting adequate prenatal care. To learn more about this issue, researchers asked stakeholders to provide data on why Neighborhood B had such low rates of prenatal care. Local clinicians said there was an increase in the number of missed appointments in that neighborhood over the past few years. What was the problem and how was it identified?

Why is Problem Identification Important ?

How to Identify the Problem? collect data and talk with stakeholders. Combining existing research and information from your stakeholders can offer some insight into the problem and its causes. Consider data sources that could help you more clearly define the problem. Start by doing an  environmental scan , a  literature review , and if necessary, surveys in the community.

How to Identify the Problem? 2. Develop your problem statement. Describe how the problem occurs, how serious it is, and its outcomes and impacts. Doing this can also help you identify any gaps in the data you have gathered. The problem statement you develop might include:

How TO Know A Successful Problem Identification Collected information about the problem by combining existing research and information from your stakeholders, and collected new data from the community if necessary Involved all relevant stakeholders when defining the problem Data collected identifies the root cause of the problem and provides a complete picture of it Problem statement includes: Who is affected How big the problem is What contributes to the problem When and where the problem is most likely to occur Problem phrased in a way that helps illuminate possible policy solutions

Step 1: Define the problem The context , it’s background and it’s symptoms ( through brainstorming, interviewing or questionnaires) Identify root causes, limiting assumptions , system and organizational boundaries and interfaces Identify resources

Step 2: determine the root causes of the problem Explore what has caused the problem May use: Fishbone diagram Pareto analysis Affinity diagram

Step 3: identification of alternatives Alternatives: optional courses of action from which a decision maker is expected to choose that are obtained from memory, vendor serach , research and development

Step 4: weigh Alternatives Criteria : the characteristics or requirments that each alternative must possess to a greater or lesser extent . Usually the alternatives are rated on how well they possess each criterion These decision criteria identify what will guide the decision-making process . They are the important facts relevant to the problem as defined

Feasibility is ascertained by deciding if a solution : Can be implemented within an acceptable timeframe? Is cost effective, reliable and realistic? Will make resource usage more effective? Can adapt to conditions as they evolve and change? Its risks are manageable? Acceptance by the people who will use and implement the solution is key to success.

Step 5: implementation Once the solution has been chosen, initial project planning begins and establishes:

Step Six: Evaluate the Outcome

Problems Firefighting as a last resort not the goal—back to not avoiding problems, make them visible. How you take past problems and prevent them from happening again. Error-proofing.

Obtain history of problem. Observe process where problem is occurring (Observation Walk). Identify place in process where problem originates . Define the Problem

Root Cause Analysis: 5 Whys Why? Question: Why? Why? Why? Why?

Root Cause Analysis: 5 Whys Why did the auto accident happen?

One Possible Explanation 1. Why was there a rear-end collision? A: Snow-covered road 2. Why did the snow on the road cause the accident? A: The tires skid on slippery snow 3. Why did the tires skid? A: The anti-lock brakes didn’t work right 4. Why didn’t the anti-lock brakes work right? A: Hit brakes too fast 5. Why did the driver hit the brakes so fast? A: Driving too close for the conditions

5 Whys Root Cause Analysis What did you learn from this activity ?

Root Cause Analysis: 5 Whys Why? Why? Wasn’t the drywall installed in room 101? Elec./Comm. conduit not completed. Did not have material needed to complete work. Wasn’t the conduit installed? Why? Wasn’t the material available? Materials ordered late. Why? Were materials ordered late? Open RFI regarding a discrepancy in plans/specs. Why? Did the RFI remain open? RFI submitted late, lack of urgency.

First Run Studies Plan – Do – Check – Act

Plan – D – C - A Plan what we are going to do. Determine: - Where we are? - Where we need to be. - How will we close this gap? Identify potential solutions. Plan

Plan – Do – C - A Test a few solutions (more than one) Do

Plan – Do – Check - A Determine if you have reached where you need to be. Establish on-going measures of success. Check

Plan – Do – Check - Act Establish Controls / Establish On-going Measurement. Otherwise complete Cycle #2. Act

Summary Obtaining the history of the problem is essential to defining the problem. Observing the process where it takes place is important for defining the problem. Using the 5 Whys is useful for identifying the root cause. PDCA is a powerful approach for structuring the problem-solving process. 2-18

Thank you
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