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How Systems Thinking Can Fix Healthcare's Organizational Chaos | Dr Sharen Paine

Breaking Free from Command-and-Control: A Cybernetics Expert's Guide to Building Viable Healthcare Systems

"We want a two-way flow of communication so that we have a better understanding through the levels of an organisation up through those levels of what's actually happening and we can make decisions closer to the ground."

— Dr. Sharen Paine

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In this episode of Clinical Changemakers, Dr. Sharen Paine, a systems thinking expert with a doctorate in business administration focusing on cybernetics, explores why healthcare organisations repeatedly struggle with the same problems despite constant restructures. Drawing from her hands-on work with ophthalmology services, Dr. Paine introduces the Viable System Model (VSM) as a framework for creating truly functional healthcare organisations that can adapt and thrive rather than merely survive.


Key Takeaways

Cybernetics vs. Command-and-Control: Healthcare systems fail because they rely on one-way, top-down commands rather than cybernetic feedback loops. True organisational health requires continuous information flow between all levels, like an aircraft's autopilot system that constantly adjusts based on environmental feedback, not rigid directives from a distant control tower.

The Black Hole of Management Chaos: Service managers and clinical directors get consumed by day-to-day firefighting because healthcare systems lack proper coordination functions. Without clear coordination mechanisms, everything collapses into the management layer, creating a "tumble dryer" of urgent tasks that prevents strategic thinking and long-term planning.

The Five Functions of Viable Systems: Every healthcare organisation needs five continuously operating subsystems: (1) Operations that deliver patient care, (2) Coordination that orchestrates daily activities, (3) Management that sets conditions for success, (4) Intelligence/Planning that looks ahead strategically, and (5) Governance that defines purpose and values. Most healthcare systems conflate these functions, leading to dysfunction.

Recursive Autonomy Creates Efficiency: The VSM applies at every level—from national health systems down to individual departments. Each level requires all five functions to operate with appropriate autonomy. A $150 equipment purchase shouldn't require Wellington approval, just as an ophthalmology clinic shouldn't decide national hospital placement. Right-sized autonomy eliminates bureaucratic bottlenecks.

Coordination is the Missing Function: Healthcare systems fail to recognise coordination as a distinct, critical function requiring dedicated resources and IT systems. Coordination includes prioritised wait lists, rosters, schedules, skills matrices, and training—currently done manually or through spreadsheets, creating errors and inefficiency. Proper coordination would prevent most day-to-day chaos.

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Where to Find Our Guest

Dr. Sharen Paine (LinkedIn)


In This Episode

00:00 - Introduction: Dr. Sharen Paine's background in cybernetics and systems thinking

07:37 - Sharen's journey: From mental health services to ophthalmology system challenges

15:05 - Production planning struggles: Why system changes fail without organizational support

18:16 - The governance-management-operations disconnect in healthcare hierarchies

25:04 - Introduction to the Viable System Model: Five essential organizational functions

26:59 - Defining viability: How organizations persist and adapt over time

28:05 - The five subsystems explained: From governance to operations

36:05 - Applying VSM to ophthalmology: What it looks like in practice

46:33 - Functions vs. roles: VSM describes what needs to happen, not organization charts

55:29 - Building collaborative understanding: Clinicians learning constraints, managers understanding frontlines

59:48 - Bottom-up implementation: Practical steps toward VSM adoption

1:05:12 - The VSM perspective: Seeing cybernetic patterns everywhere


Referenced

  • Utilising insights from cybernetics and the Viable System Model to address health system disconnects (Doctoral Thesis)

  • Principles for embedding learning and adaptation into the New Zealand health system functioning: the example of the Viable System Model (paper)

  • Utilising VSM insights to address health system disconnects: introducing three novel organisational pathologies (paper)

  • Mapping clinical governance to practitioner roles and responsibilities (paper)

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Contact

If you have any feedback, questions or if you'd like to get in touch, reach out at jono@clinicalchangemakers.com

Music Attribution: Music by AudioCoffee from Pixabay.


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