Welcome to Health Care POV | sign in | join
CIO Unplugged

Tradition!

Published November 24, 2008 10:03 AM by Edward Marx

The views and opinions expressed in this blog are mine personally, and are not necessarily representative of Texas Health Resources (THR) or its subsidiaries.

I love Broadway. One benefit of working in Cleveland for 8 years was our proximity to the crown of the city, Playhouse Square. Playhouse represented the largest theatre district outside of Broadway. We enjoyed the most famous shows as well as the emerging ones and even added our then pre-teen children as subscribers to offer them a taste of culture. Broadway struck me as remarkable considering my youthful idea of entertainment had been rumbling in a mosh pit in the day slamming to the Boomtown Rats, Missing Persons and The Clash to name a few.

Our first show was Fiddler on the Roof, the marvelously deep story of Tevye, father of five daughters. Tevye struggled to maintain balance when outside influences encroached upon his religious traditions and his family. His three eldest daughters inched aggressively toward abandoning the established customs of a Jewish marriage by choosing their own husbands, forcing Tevye to question their age-old practices. Meanwhile, the Tsar was working to evict the Jews from their village, Anatevka. Should Tevye stay and die fighting, or move on? He lived a precarious existence, like that of a fiddler perching on a roof. Between the future and...Tradition!

This story connected with the fiddler in me, for I also lived in the tension between old and new. Between tradition and innovation. The good old days and the brave new world. When my family journeyed to the United States from Germany in 1975, we preserved our Bavarian traditions. I wore Lederhosen to school, and it didn't take long to see that I was not up to date with the western culture. It took a while, but I finally convinced my boss -- I mean Mother -- to buy me a pair of blue jeans. Mom's sauerbraten and spätzle, on the other hand, I'll never give up, for those items have little eternal influence.

Thanks to my youth experience, I have since kept abreast of the trends, culturally and in business. Desiring to thrive in my work rather than simply survive, I lean progressively toward the new and bold. It's frightening at times to step into unexplored or unconventional territory. But the benefit has always been worth the risk. Imperfect and painful? Oh yes. But better to endure the flaming path of innovation than smother and die under the yolk of tradition.

Sit back for a moment and assess your life. Then assess your department. Are you where you should be, or are you wearing Lederhosen to work?

"But it's my organization that lives in the obsolete world, not I," you say.

Yes, organizations are full of traditions and each has its own rooftop fiddler. Some traditions are important, yet many are simply tradition. Following tradition for tradition's sake is exposed when groundbreaking ideas are presented, especially from individuals new to the organization. I pity the organization whose culture is steeped so deeply in tradition that attempts to introduce innovations and foreign concepts are summarily rebuffed, leaving that organization to smother, unchanged. Unfortunately, those passionate leaders who could help advance an organization into the latest fashion of blue jeans might get discouraged and leave. Or worse. They'll allow themselves to be assimilated and acquiesce to tradition.

In this day and age, technology is progressing at such a rapid pace that the IT leader cannot be timid in exploiting it. Do you want to make a difference or not? Do you remember why you got into this business? Are you staying true to that calling? Or have you been beaten down over the years by those who refuse to grow? For some of you, it's time to resurrect the vision that once inspired your exuberance to change the health care world, to impact patient safety and the quality of care. We've got to care enough to not let ourselves become complacent. Whether or not you're new to your organization, shake the bonds of tradition-for-tradition-sake and lead boldly. Just like Tevye's daughters (Tzeitel, Hodel, Chava) you also must push forward. We can all glean from the character Perchik, who tired of rhetoric and feel-good culture and chose to blaze a new trail.

Will blazing a new trail lead you to danger and possibly put your position at risk? Probably. But aren't the advancements we fight for worth the crusade to bring about prosperity for our patients and employers? They are to me. I'd rather move on than wither under...TRADITION!

3 comments

The views and opinions expressed in this blog are mine personally, and are not necessarily representative

June 30, 2009 11:00 AM

The views and opinions expressed in this blog are mine personally, and are not necessarily representative

March 24, 2009 10:16 PM

Tradition is great but not at the cost of innovation or when it is used as a crutch.  I enjoyed the comments.

Tim Coogan December 8, 2008 1:03 PM

leave a comment



To prevent comment spam, please type the code you see below into the code field before submitting your comment. If you cannot read the numbers in the image, reload the page to generate a new one.

Captcha
Enter the security code below: