Sir Harry Burns, Scotland’s Chief Medical Officer, argues that the promotion of health has for too long been based upon a deficit model. That is, we tend to focus on identifying the problems and causes of ill health. In turn this leads to the identification of outcomes all directed towards a particular deficit, e.g. reduce the number of people who smoke; reduce alcohol intake; or increase exercise levels. The system is comfortable with these discrete outcomes and develops strategies and activities aimed at achieving these outcomes.
Yet the evidence clearly shows that such a deficit led model has not led to any substantial impact upon those most vulnerable to ill health, i.e. the poorest in our society. Sir Harry recommends that in order to promote good health we need to focus on what creates health (salutogenesis) rather than the traditional view of preventing illness.
In order to achieve that goal people need to be able to understand their lives, manage this day to day, and see themselves and life as worthwhile. People who feel they have little control over life experience more stress. This chronic stress mechanism in the body risks seriously damaging health and quality of life.
In turn this has led the Chief Medical Officer to propose that we fundamentally shift public health policy towards seeing the assets within people as individuals and in groups within communities, and that we support people to work together and take control of their own lives.
Such a conclusion challenges those of us in public service who have been conditioned over the years to focus upon a simplistic notion between cause and effect, e.g. reduce smoking levels by implementing a smoking reduction strategy; or (in our world of education) improve literacy levels by introducing a new reading scheme. This approach appeals to our managerialist tendencies and enables us to set targets, allocate budgets and evaluate success, thereby fulfilling our obligation within the professional management hierarchy.
Yet Sir Harry Burns is not alone in challenging this managerialist approach, with its simplistic assumptions regarding cause and effect, and suggesting that a more holistic and seemingly incidental approach can allow us to achieve our goals more effectively.
The concept of ‘obliquity’ (the state or condition of being oblique) was first proposed by another famous Scottish medical figure in the form of the Nobel Prize winner Sir James Black, which he defined as follows:
“In business as in science, it seems that you are often most successful in achieving something when you are trying to do something else. I think of it as the principle of ‘obliquity’.”
Obliquity has been further developed by Scottish economist John Kay, who argues that often the best way of achieving our goals, especially those which are particularly complex, is to do so indirectly.
“Strange as it may seem, overcoming geographic obstacles, winning decisive battles or meeting global business targets are the type of goals often best achieved when pursued indirectly. This is the idea of Obliquity. Oblique approaches are most effective in difficult terrain, or where outcomes depend on interactions with other people.” John Kay 2004
The paradox presented by Kay is that if you want to go in one direction that the best route might often be to go in another. The irony of Kay’s work is that the managerialist aspirations of those of us involved in public service delivery leads us to mirror what we think to be the effectiveness of the rationalist commercial approach. We set outcomes, we attempt to control parameters, we measure and evaluate, but above all we get locked into doing things the way we have done them in the past and expect different outcomes just because we have planned them better. It was Einstein wasn’t it who was attributed to have described this as insanity i.e. “….doing the same thing over and over again but expecting different results.”
Yet what we tend to miss is that the world which we inhabit is complex and imperfectly understood. Any analysis of our plans would support such a conclusion given the extent of our certainty that we can succeed where others have failed.
So what has all this got to do with our own complex business of education? Well from a personal perspective the concept of ‘obliquity’ strikes a chord in my intuitive understanding of how the world works.
For education is an iterative process which benefits from an open minded and adaptive approach which values problem solving and creativity. As soon as we begin to believe that we can make a predictable connection between an action and outcome then we are almost destined to fail. “Results are what we expect, consequences are what we get” Robert McNamara
Consider the traditional approach to improving the educational outcomes for the lowest attaining 20% of students in our schools – an intractable problem for Scottish education. Typically we would identify the students, plan a range of actions targeted at their deficits, and sit back expecting positive results – and then be surprised when no substantive change takes place.
An oblique approach to the problem would not tackle this directly but would amongst other things address the culture of the school, teachers’ values, and the value placed on education in our most disadvantaged communities.
Yet such an approach would take courageous leadership from a school leader, particularly in a professional environment that places undue value on sophisticated plans and confident ‘direct’ action.
If salutogenesis were already in place, anyone suggesting its replacement by the current status quo would be regarded as insane.
Enjoyed reading this blog – and it very much strikes a chord with what we have been trying to do with Support from the Start.
What really interest me though is why we persist with such an emphasis on deficit based approaches – and we do – as even a cursory glance at SOA’s childen’s service plans etc etc will show. A recent speech by Sir Harry which is available on youtube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=3uruL2jSbIQ
addresses this issue. He talks about the failure of deficit model to change complex problems and that a step change is needed. He describes how systems have a rationale to grow ‘need’ and almost like organisms will generate an environment in which they can grow. Systems are about control and power. He does not see systems as negative if your priority is to do a lot of one thing or need to be very precise, in these case a system is what is needed. However, if it people changing their behaviour or their view of themselves and their communities then systems can actually get in the way by taking power and control away from people. The step change we need is a shift of power towards people and away from systems for complex problems like poor attainment or health inequality. We need to support people to come up with thier own solutions building on the strengths they do have, not addressing the problems defined by the system. Systems can really help by scaling up what people say is working for them.
Steven, thank you so much for such a constructive comment. The challenge for people in positions such as mine is to keep this at the forefront of our minds as we engage in the strategic planning process.
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The principle you outline here Don struck a chord, at least on a basic level, with our P3 orienteering session earlier this week as I’ve outlined on the Outdoor Learning Service blog. This indirect means of “achieving something when you are trying to do something else” can be integrated in many activities and can be adapted to help students at every level.
https://www.edubuzz.org/eloes/