PDSA: Plan-do-study-act
What is PDSA?
PDSA, or Plan-Do-Study-Act, is an iterative, four-stage problem-solving model used for improving a process or carrying out change.
When using the PDSA cycle, it's important to include internal and external customers; they can provide feedback about what works and what doesn't. The customer defines quality, so it would make sense to also involve them in the process when appropriate or feasible, to increase acceptance of the end result. (If you're unsure about, who your customers are, you may want to create a customer chain to assist in identification.)
In applying PDSA, ask yourself three questions:
What are we trying to accomplish?
How will we know that a change is an improvement?
What changes can we make that will result in an improvement?
Stage 1: Plan
A. Recruit team
Assemble a team that has knowledge of the problem or opportunity for improvement. Consider the strengths each team member brings—look for engaged, forward-thinking staff.
After recruiting team members, identify roles and responsibilities, set timelines, and establish a meeting schedule.
B. Draft an aim statement
Describe what you want to accomplish in an aim statement. Try to answer those three fundamental questions:
What are we trying to accomplish?
How will we know that a change is an improvement?
What change can we make that will result in improvement?
C. Describe current context and process
brainstorm
Examine your current process. Start by asking the team these basic questions:
What are we doing now?
How do we do it?
What are the major steps in the process?
Who is involved?
What do they do?
What is done well?
What could be done better?
You might have already answered the last two questions if you have performed a SWOT analysis.
Try a swim lane map
You may find it helpful to construct a swim lane map to visually describe your process.
Creating a process flow or at least depicting the current process can be very useful. If your team runs into road blocks, you might have found where the problem is occurring—or maybe the right person for identifying a missing step is not at the table.
Gather more detail
Once the general structure is completed, these can be some more helpful questions to ask:
How long does the process currently take? Each step?
Is there variation in the way the process is currently completed?
D. Describe the problem
Using the aim statement created in Step B, state your desired accomplishments, and use data and information to measure how your organization meets/does not meet those accomplishments.
For example: If your objective is to maximize your staff's quality of work life, you might find evidence by surveying employees on workplace stressors.
Write a problem statement
Write a problem statement to clearly summarize your team's consensus on the problem. You may find it helpful to prioritize problems, if your team has identified more than one, and/or include a justification of why you chose your problem(s).
E. Identify causes and alternatives
Analyze causes
For the problem in your problem statement, work to identify causes of the problem using tools such as control charts, fishbones, and work flow process maps (e.g., flowcharts, swim lane maps). The end of the cause analysis should summarize the cause analysis by describing and justifying the root causes.
Examine your process, and ask:
Is this process efficient? What is the cost (including money, time, or other resources)?
Are we doing the right steps in the right way?
Does someone else do this same process in a different way?
Develop alternatives
Try to mitigate your root causes by completing the statement,
"If we do __________, then __________ will happen."
Choose an alternative (or a few alternatives) that you believe will best help you reach your objective and maximize your resources.
Develop an action plan, including necessary staff/resources and a timeline. Try to account for risks you might face as you implement your action plan.
Stage 2: Do
Start to implement your action plan. Be sure to collect data as you go, to help you evaluate your plan in Stage 3: Study. Your team might find it helpful to use a check sheet, flowchart, swim lane map, or run chart to capture data/occurrences as they happen or over time.
Your team should also document problems, unexpected effects, and general observations.
Stage 3: Study
Using the aim statement drafted in Stage 1: Plan, and data gathered during Stage 2: Do, determine:
Did your plan result in an improvement? By how much/little?
Was the action worth the investment?
Do you see trends?
Were there unintended side effects?
You can use a number of different tools to visually review and evaluate an improvement, like a Pareto chart, control chart, or run chart.
Stage 4: Act
Reflect on plan and outcomes
If your team determined the plan resulted in success, standardize the improvement and begin to use it regularly. After some time, return to Stage 1: Plan and re-examine the process to learn where it can be further improved.
If your team believes a different approach would be more successful, return to Stage 1: Plan, and develop a new and different plan that might result in success.
The PDSA cycle is ongoing, and organizations become more efficient as they intuitively adopt PDSA into their planning.
Celebrate improvements and lessons learned
Communicate accomplishments to internal and external customers
Take steps to preserve your gains and sustain your accomplishments
Make long-term plans for additional improvements
Conduct iterative PDSA cycles when needed