Email us : info@waife.com
Management Consulting for Clinical Research
One of my friends in the biotech industry explained the business with this metaphor: working in biotech was like running full speed at a brick wall, and at the last possible second, the brick wall would disappear, only to be replaced by another brick wall farther ahead. Those brick walls, of course, represented critical milestones, such as another round of venture funding, or a research result, a regulatory filing, and so on. It was the idea of running full speed that stayed with me. While common enough in small entrepreneurial companies, that sense of speed, focus and anxiety is rarely found in pharma, despite lip service to the contrary. Where is the sense of urgency in clinical development?

This is not the say that we do not all work hard. It is not to say we don’t care about the progress of our work. But it is to say that at most pharmaceutical companies, day-to-day, we have neither the energy, direction or discipline to conduct our operations urgently. And there are so many reasons to do so! Deadlines, stock options, competition, everyday failures, demanding bosses – not to mention the patients with few, unsatisfactory options waiting for our new therapies.

Some of us (people and companies) certainly may start with enthusiasm. But particularly at the clinical stage, so many factors build up to weigh us down: the myriad inherent delays, the disappointing scientific results, the bureaucracy of corporations and regulations, the unavoidable time intervals of research itself. This is all true, but that’s what we are here for – “that’s why they call it work.”

Most companies have institutionalized processes for complacency, rather than for urgency. Some have become standard behavior since they are so familiar:

  • Slow contracting with CROs
  • Slow payments to vendors and investigators
  • Slow IT projects that are completed years after originally estimated
  • Slow adoption of already-approved process changes
  • Slow responses to poor performance metrics
  • Slow reporting of information requested by operational staff from report programmers
  • Slow protocol development
  • Slow document review and approval
  • Slow study start up.

How many of these do you take for granted, and assume they are inevitable? But they are not inevitable; they are all human-driven! These are not immutable laws of nature; these activities are slow because we allow them to be! There is nothing standing in the way of speed except the lack of will, the lack of urgency.

Another anecdote: during the beginning of one of my first consulting assignments, I mentioned to my client (a junior vice president) that my invoice hadn’t been paid. He stood up, told me to wait there, and left his office for about 20 minutes. He came back with a paper check and handed it to me, apologizing. Ok, I was spoiled for life, but the point is, of course it’s possible to get a check cut, a report run, a contract signed, a meeting scheduled! It just takes a person to do it.

Not all delays – maybe not even most – are caused by perverse obstinance. Think of the many things that fill our days instead of urgent work – emails, meetings back-to-back and triple-scheduled, teleconferences where you can’t hear what most of the people are saying. It’s all too easy for our days to slip away. What most of us are not doing is comparing our tasks, our to-do lists, our schedules, to the most important work list of all: what are the goals of my organization, my department, my project? How is what I am doing right now serving those goals? What does deciding this issue, or reading this email, have to do with moving closer to these goals?

Changing an environment from complacency to urgency requires some bravery and lots of leadership. Let’s look at some examples:

  • You’ve been in a team meeting all morning, getting close to the end of a long project which is supposed to develop a new set of evaluation criteria for your CRO’s. The leader asks if all are in agreement, and one key member says, “maybe, but I have to check with my boss. We’ll get back to you.”
  • You’re working with a statistician on completing the FSR. It’s not due until next month, but you’re very nearly done and it would be advantageous to get it submitted early. You call her up for the third time that day, and find out she’s gone home, and will be on vacation for two weeks ­– something she neglected to tell you about.
  • You got approval to add someone to your staff at the beginning of the year but HR still hasn’t send you qualified resumes. When you pick someone to interview, it takes weeks to schedule her (or she has already found another job). When you try to take matters into your own hands, you are scolded for not following procedures.
  • You’ve finally scheduled a teleconference with a key opinion leader who is very hard to reach. You need the data manager in on the call but he is in another building on campus and says it’s too far to walk. You could tie him into the telecon, but he points out (correctly) that his accent is too thick to be well understood over the phone.
  • Marketing has been warning for years that you need real world patient experience data to be competitive with your new allergy medication. But despite what your competitors were accomplishing, regulatory was still skeptical about approval. Instead of engaging with data management on the issue, they keep asking to see one more demo from one more vendor.

I am sure you can provide many examples from your own organization. What’s missing in each of these situations is someone to speak up ­– not to argue the issue but to remind all involved that we are holding up the improvements, the decision, the work. And that our work is urgent: we needed to hire that new person yesterday, we needed that new software yesterday, we needed that data yesterday, we needed those sites ready for FPI yesterday. And once having spoken up, we need to pursue the resolution to a quick closure, using whatever channels of authority are necessary. Equally essential is the commitment and vocal backing of executive leadership to make clear that urgency is an organizational value and priority.

To a healthcare team in your local Emergency Department, questions of priority, focus and speed are regularly and clearly answered. They know how to triage, how to follow emergency care protocols, how to choose and listen and analyze and solve with calm, professional urgency. We all need this essence­ – to triage our work lives and cut through the low priorities. And we need to encourage our colleagues to do the same, so we can bring our collective focus and precious energy to the meaningful work our companies and organizations are doing. It’s why we chose this profession; let’s do it with urgency.

scdm-posters-2016-winners-w-steve

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

San Diego, CA-(September 12, 2016) – Waife & Associates, management consultants for clinical research, sponsored the Poster Session at the Society for Clinical Data Management Annual Conference this week. Senior Associate Steve Shevel was on-hand to present the awards for best Posters to the following winners:

First Place: Jaskiran Singh, NIH

Second Place: Mary Williams, Duke

Third Place: Maria Fernanda Valverde da Silva, Gilead

“It is a pleasure to personally present these awards to the outstanding work of these data management professionals,” said Steve. “Waife & Associates has been sponsoring these Awards since their inception as one contribution to the development of the data management community and its professional standing.”   

 

About Waife & Associates, Inc.

Waife & Associates, Inc. was established in 1993 to help clinical research companies build competitive advantage through process improvement and technology adoption. Headquartered in MA, U.S., it applies senior domain expertise to provide pragmatic solutions to common operations challenges. For more info, visit http://www.waife.com/

FREMONT, CA-(Pharma Tech Outlook- Jun 15, 2016) – Waife & Associates, today announced that it has been recognized by Pharma Tech Outlook for Top 10 Clinical Data Management Solution Providers 2016.

Pharma Tech Outlook features its ‘Top 10 Clinical Data Management Solution Providers’ list annually in recognition of the top tech organizations helping business around the world. A variety of subjective and objective criteria were used for choosing the winners. Waife & Associates specializes in biopharma clinical research, process consulting in clinical research, information technology implementation (EDC, CTMS, AES, EDMS, etc.), and change management.

“It is a great honor to announce Waife & Associates, Inc. as one among the Top 10 Clinical Data Management Solution Providers 2016,” said Stacey Smith, Managing Editor of Pharma Tech Outlook “Waife & Associates has been making great strides in the clinical data management arena and demonstrates its prowess in helping clinical research organizations and pharmaceutical industries to make better decisions.”  

About Pharma Tech Outlook

Published from Fremont, California, Pharma Tech Outlook is a print magazine that covers most important and latest developments in pharmaceutical industries. A distinguished panel comprising of top IT decision makers, CIOs and CTOs from the pharma and life sciences industry, as well as the Pharma Tech Outlook editorial board finalized the ‘Top 10 Clinical Data Management Solution Providers 2016’ in the U.S. and shortlisted the best vendors and consultants. For more info: http://www.pharmatechoutlook.com/

About Waife & Associates, Inc.

Waife & Associates, Inc. was established in 1993 to help clinical research companies build competitive advantage through process improvement and technology adoption. Headquartered in MA, U.S., it applies senior domain expertise to provide pragmatic solutions to common operations challenges. For more info, visit http://www.waife.com/

Needham, MA, June 6, 2016– The third annual Benjamin and Sholom Waife Memorial Scholarship in Scientific Journalism was awarded at Needham, Mass. High School Class Day ceremonies this Spring. The scholarship, created by Waife & Associates, Inc., supports collegiate studies toward a career in writing or journalism about science and medicine. The annual award’s recipient this year is Sydney Kornbleuth, selected by the faculty of Needham High School.

 

The Scholarship is in memory of Benjamin Waife (1895-1972) and his son Sholom O. Waife, MD (1919-2011). Waife & Associates, Inc. is based in Needham and was founded by Dr. Waife’s son, Ronald S. Waife. Benjamin Waife, writing under the pen name B. Z. Goldberg, was a newspaper editor and columnist for over fifty years for New York and Israeli newspapers. For much of his career he was managing editor of Der Tog, one of the two main Yiddish newspapers in New York City in the 20th century.  He earned one of the first psychology PhD’s from Columbia and wrote two books, in addition to his weekly column which appeared in various newspapers until his death.

 

Dr. Sholom Waife continued the family writing heritage by combining it with his medical profession. He started one of the first in-service hospital CME Programs, at Philadelphia General Hospital, developed an award-winning series of textbooks while at Eli Lilly & Co. which were distributed to all US medical school graduates, wrote a column for the Physicians Bulletin, co-founded the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, and was an early national officer of the American Medical Writers Association (AMWA).

 

Both Benjamin and Sholom Waife dedicated their professional lives to clarity in writing and using the written word to make complex subjects easier to comprehend. The Scholarship is intended to further these principles, in these times when science and medicine are increasingly affecting our daily lives, yet are moving further from common understanding.

 

Waife & Associates, Inc. awards this scholarship annually. The company provides management consulting services to biopharma organizations conducting clinical research.

“A particularly sad consequence of operational mediocrity is its impact on innovation.”

What happened to “Operational Excellence”? It is a beautiful phrase and a worthy goal. But as biopharmas and CROs start to dismantle or de-fund their Operational Excellence departments, we should ask what is happening. Do we no longer desire excellence? Do we think we have achieved it?

Operational Excellence arrived as a melodious piece of jargon because of disillusionment with what came before it: TQM first, then Process Improvement, then various branded methodologies (hungry-eight-omega, you know who you are). The “excellence” efforts have suffered similar fates to the earlier incarnations – underfunding, insincere management commitments, skepticism, fatigue and fundamental misunderstandings about what process improvement can and should be. Changing the branding does not change the results because of these key flaws, and they all contribute to a negative feedback loop. Missed expectations leads to skepticism, poor techniques lead to change fatigue, underfunding prevents sustained effort, and insincere commitments makes re-prioritizing all too easy.

Improving clinical development’s methods is still very much needed. The fundamental inefficiency of biopharma clinical development is driven by many external factors, true, but we don’t do well with the hand we are dealt. And we’ve seen that simply outsourcing the problem (by far the most common solution today) has only created variable-cost inefficiency instead of fixed.

The irrelevance of outsourcing to improving efficiency is another column in itself. Sponsors like CROs to use methods they recognize, no matter how suboptimal, and CROs know they will be paid regardless, so the system has no meaningful incentives to efficiency besides competing billing rate charts. For all the many failings of biopharma outsourcing procurement departments, their failure to make an impact on overall industry methods may be the most damning.

Process improvement is ripe for action in all aspects of clinical development: protocol design, subject enrollment, data management, study team conduct, trial operations oversight, safety surveillance, use of information technology, investigative site communication and performance, monitoring and more. Your company probably has had multiple initiatives in most of these areas already, but meaningful results are rare and usually fleeting. We live in operational mediocrity instead of operational excellence. Nonetheless, we can no more give up on process change because it fails often than we can give up on early stage drug research because it fails often. Improving processes is still worthwhile; indeed it is an unavoidable imperative.

A particularly sad consequence of operational mediocrity is its impact on innovation. If we look at the current appealing innovations in clinical development – things like risk-based monitoring, fully electronic Trial Master Files, exploiting mHealth technologies, next-generation EDC, professionalized CRO oversight, and so on – each involve significant workflow and responsibility changes that must be as innovative as the technology used. The industry’s long experience with trying to exploit EDC and eCOA technologies has taught us this: underlying every innovation is a change in the way we work. Otherwise there is no innovation. And to make that change, organizations and internal thought leaders must understand and respect the nitty-gritty process changes which need to be defined, agreed to, tested and trained.

How do we steer back towards something approximating excellence? I have seen considerable success in what I call a “pragmatic” approach ­– one that takes on change step by step. It is grounded on several key essential items:

  • Committed and visible executive management
  • Traceability to key enterprise goals
  • Breaking the task into manageable, iterative pieces which, once achieved, serve as positive examples which break the skepticism cycle
  • Which must be followed immediately by additional improvement pieces to maintain momentum and convince staff it is “real this time.”

One way of thinking of this is that is akin to “evidence-based” medicine. As used here, it is an evidence-based method. EBM is a useful distinction from JBM (jargon-based methods), which is used instead all too frequently. It can be generalized that jargon is the refuge of those with little else to offer.

The building blocks of pragmatic process improvement will certainly sound familiar (identifying key business drivers, interviewing stakeholders, designing processes in workshop settings, documenting and implementing the changes and monitoring first use). This is like saying that basketball is dribbling down the court and putting the ball in that hoop up there. The hard part is overcoming all the typical obstacles that can so easily undermine improvement projects, some of which we have alluded to.

Let’s take the ubiquitous “workshop” as an example. Everybody in pharma has been to many workshops. What are the characteristics of those you remember as being productive? The workshop needs to have a crystal-clear purpose achievable in the time allotted. It needs a domain-knowledgeable facilitator. It requires some organizing mechanical technique to make the discussion and results tangible. Most important is the selection of the participants: 18 people chosen for their political affiliation does not a workshop make. That is better a definition of a circus. Instead a small group of stakeholders who can truly devote the necessary time to the task will be essential. It all sounds familiar, but the subtlety of applying pragmatism to each step is the heart of the matter.

Underlying the success of pragmatic process improvement is the correct governance – who is in charge, who funds, who decides, who staffs, who is accountable? The answer is always a little different from company to company. Should the people who do the work being improved be responsible for improving it? (Seems logical and essential to me.) Can process improvement cost less by creating a central dedicated department (which risks separating domain knowledge from the process knowledge)? Should it be outsourced like everything else? Should it be lumped in with the IT, HR or training departments? Every company will try it differently, but tying performance accountability to the management of the process in question is the most powerful solution.

 

Change fatigue, change skepticism, wasteful projects and unmet expectations are all real challenges to improving the way we work. They all can be overcome by a pragmatic approach to process improvement that is properly governed, with visible management commitment, taken in manageable steps that demonstrate success, and grounding those improvements permanently in our work environment. This steers us back toward excellence, which is the only direction worth traveling.