Checklists Gone Wrong
/Checklists are simple yet powerful tools. A wide array of industries have succeeded with checklists. Pilots use them to improve flight safety. Hospitals use them to improve patient care. Nuclear power plants use them to ensure safe operations.
Atul Gawande, famed surgeon and New York Times best-selling author, wrote the book on checklists – The Checklist Manifesto. It’s an insightful, practical look at how organizations use checklists to succeed in pressure-filled environments.
Checklist implementation is very popular. Organizations enthusiastically publicize how checklists have counteracted human and organizational flaws.
But like most good things, checklists have been misconstrued and distorted to become a headache, not a help, to an organization.
Organizations require mindless checklist completion instead of using them as a tool to improve understanding. It’s not the finishing of a checklist that drives value. It’s the thinking that occurs along the way that otherwise would not have happened. Checklists have become another mandated task to get out of the way. After all, bureaucratic organizations love nothing more than adding additional documentation and compliance tasks.
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