I chose the desirability of zero tolerance
for procrastination for my remarks today because I have seen so many
opportunities lost in health and medicine because of delays in taking action. Procrastination
ranks alongside shortage of cash as an explanation of things not being done. It
is, quintessentially, bad management.
Procrastination, according to Wikipedia, is “the avoidance of doing a task that needs to be accomplished.
It is the practice of doing more pleasurable things in place of less
pleasurable ones, or carrying out less urgent tasks instead of more urgent
ones, thus putting off impending tasks to a later time”. Instead of discussing
an impending financial crisis, the board of a corporation discusses parking
arrangements for its members.
The word starts
with pro meaning forward and ends
with crastinate that comes from the
Latin for ‘tomorrow’ – pushing things forward from today into tomorrow. The
word dates from 1540, coincidentally around the time of the invention of the
wristwatch. Any word enduring since the sixteenth century must have preserved its
usefulness; otherwise it would have disappeared.
Procrastination
is the subject of jokes:
- · "One of these days I'm going to get help for my procrastination problem."
- · "I like work. It fascinates me. I can sit and look at it for hours."
- · "The worst form of procrastination is reading a procrastination quote, feeling the guilt and not doing anything about it."
- · Or this superb quote from Homer Simpson "If something's hard to do, then what's the point?!"
There are
several pages of citations of odes to procrastination on Google, most written
by students, and most terrible.
But that procrastination
is, indeed, a problem is reflected in the shelves of self-help books,
supportive psychotherapy, invitations to join Procrastinators Anonymous and
gurus who will free you of its grip – fee-for-service. You pay today, they free
you tomorrow – perhaps. Even saints suffer from procrastination or from a
variant. Saint Paul writes, in his letter to Roman Christians, “the good that I
would I do not: but the evil which I would not, that I do.” Paul is identifying
a deeper problem than that found in the common-or-garden variety of
procrastination, but there are common elements.
Chris Selby
Smith was the embodiment of non-procrastination. He had heaps of energy and promptly
did what obviously needed doing. I knew him slightly between 1980 and 1984, after
he became First Assistant Secretary in the Commonwealth Department of Health.
He had a reputation that will surprise none of you who knew him – for a rare
combination of brilliance, experience, good sense, warmth, humour and energy.
My interactions with him over matters of research and research policy were a
pleasure.
He would have
approved of a recent BMJ editorial by
John Potter, professor of epidemiology in NZ. John wrote about the accumulating
evidence that eating red meat is bad for your health. (BMJ 2017;357:j2190
doi: 10.1136/bmj.j2190 (Published 9 May 2017):
‘The research community collectively
understands the problem—overconsumption of meat is bad for our health and for
the health of our planet; research even provides clear underpinnings for
evidence based policy that could limit harm to both, but these underpinnings
are not linked to action. As with many contemporary problems of resource
overuse and misdistribution, we need to decide whether to act now to reduce
human meat consumption or wait until the decay of sufficient parts of the
global system tip us into much poorer planetary, societal, and human health.’
The editor of
the BMJ, Fiona Godlee, recognised the
problem and suggested one way forward BMJ 2017;357:j2190 doi:
10.1136/bmj.j2190 (Published 9 May 2017) – readers of the journal should change
their own behaviours and reduce their consumption of red meat, she
suggests, basing her recommendation of the history of UK doctors’ reducing
their smoking on the basis of the evidence, in the mid-1950s, of its injurious
effects. This contributed to the action on tobacco taken eventually in the UK,
the US, Canada and Australia.
But you would
have to acknowledge that it took a long time! Even now, 2,000,000 Australians
smoke. It is unlikely that they do not know the hazards. Many wish to quit. Helpful
quit strategies, together with taxation, advertising bans and changing social
attitudes have reduced smoking to about 14% of our population. But many put it
off.
When I was a
respiratory physician, one of my saddest tasks was telling a patient that he
(generally) had lung cancer. Procrastination kills.
I do not wish
to posit, because procrastination is a health hazard, that the answer lies in
rushing into decisions. That is not my intention. Indeed Amartya Sen, a Nobel
Prize-winning economist, who is also a magnificent social philosopher, has
observed that one of the biggest traps in developing policy is to skimp on time
that should be spent on thought experiments designed to anticipate unintended
side-effects. We should always ask “What will spin off from this new policy
proposal?” Fools rush in.
I spent 1968
working in a small mission hospital in the western highlands of PNG – at Baiyer
River. I was a ‘can do’ man – and there was a lot to do. After six weeks, the pharmacist,
a local man named Trangipu, presented me with a ten-page order for our three-month
supply of pharmaceuticals to come by Cessna 180 from Port Moresby.
I flicked
through the list, removing several items for which I could see no need,
including many litres of chloroxylenol. I had no idea what this was – so put
the red pen through it.
When Trangipu
was checking the delivery, he asked, in some distress, where the Dettol was. You guessed it. Dettol is choloroxylenol. I can’t
remember how he overcame my error, but he was a phlegmatic, practical man used
to dealing with stuff-ups.
Months later,
when a chicken-pox epidemic was raging, I noticed that the patients no longer
had pink patches from the anti-itch calamine lotion. The patches had turned
white, stark against the dark skin of the Enga people. Having run out of calamine
lotion, Trangipu had substituted the antidiarrheal medicine, Kaomagma, which seemed to be working just
as well.
Not all rash
and impetuous decision-making has such innocent endings. Take the decision to
pay Medicare rebates for psychologists to work in association with general
practitioners. When first suggested, I thought that this made great sense. But
neither I, nor anyone else, expected the exodus of psychologists from the
public hospitals and community health services – especially rural and regional
health services – as they migrated to city general practices. I also doubt that
the cost of these private services was accurately estimated.
So, in
formulating policy, we need to steer between taking way too long and deferring
action because, in Homer Simpson’s words, “it’s too hard, so what’s the point?”
and rushing in, because of a sense of time, urgency, omnipotence or in the case
of the Dettol, youthful hubris.
It is by no
means easy to accurately identify procrastination, because other things can
delay action and they are quite possibly culpable. The
registration of medical practitioners is a complex task and, at its best, is a
sensitive and thoughtful process. But here again procrastination causes
problems, as when action is delayed in resolving what to do with an impaired
practitioner. After the failure of the agencies of medical and criminal
investigation to tackle complaints about sometimes fatal ‘Deep Sleep’ therapy
at Chelmsford Hospital, a series of articles in the early 1980s in the Sydney
Morning Herald and television coverage on 60 Minutes exposed the
abuses at the hospital, including 24 deaths from the treatment. That
forced the authorities to take action.
Let’s consider our
obligations as managers, clinicians and citizens in handling procrastination in
the health care system.
First, there is
no harm in self-reflection. “The unexamined life is not worth living” is a
dictum attributed to Socrates at his trial for impiety and corrupting youth,
for which he was subsequently sentenced to death, as described in Plato's Apology. So, to avoid Socrates’s fate,
we should check ourselves out, or, at the very least, ask colleagues whether
they perceive us as unaware procrastinators. They might, if so, suggest how to
get help.
Second, it is worth considering procrastination when, after things
have gone wrong, we undertake root-cause analyses. It is easy to be transfixed
by technical, structural and personality factors, as I have seen many times in
clinical quality reviews. We readily miss the simple realisation that, if
action had been taken ten, twenty or even sixty minutes earlier, the patient
would not have died. How and why was there this unacceptable delay?
Third, we need to keep in mind Nobelist Daniel Kahneman’s
explanation of much mistaken behaviour. We tend to substitute simpler questions
for the difficult ones we are trying to answer or solve. Such ‘fast thinking’
satisfies the urgent need for a response, but is usually wrong, leading us down
the wrong path.