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The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right 1st Edition, Kindle Edition

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 13,843 ratings

The New York Times bestselling author of Being Mortal and Complications reveals the surprising power of the ordinary checklist

We live in a world of great and increasing complexity, where even the most expert professionals struggle to master the tasks they face. Longer training, ever more advanced technologies—neither seems to prevent grievous errors. But in a hopeful turn, acclaimed surgeon and writer Atul Gawande finds a remedy in the humblest and simplest of techniques: the checklist. First introduced decades ago by the U.S. Air Force, checklists have enabled pilots to fly aircraft of mind-boggling sophistication. Now innovative checklists are being adopted in hospitals around the world, helping doctors and nurses respond to everything from flu epidemics to avalanches. Even in the immensely complex world of surgery, a simple ninety-second variant has cut the rate of fatalities by more than a third.

In riveting stories, Gawande takes us from Austria, where an emergency checklist saved a drowning victim who had spent half an hour underwater, to Michigan, where a cleanliness checklist in intensive care units virtually eliminated a type of deadly hospital infection. He explains how checklists actually work to prompt striking and immediate improvements. And he follows the checklist revolution into fields well beyond medicine, from disaster response to investment banking, skyscraper construction, and businesses of all kinds.

An intellectual adventure in which lives are lost and saved and one simple idea makes a tremendous difference,
The Checklist Manifesto is essential reading for anyone working to get things right.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Amazon Best Books of the Month, December 2009: With a title like The Checklist Manifesto, it would be natural to expect that Atul Gawande is bent on revolutionizing that most loved-hated activity of workers the world over: the to-do list. But it's not the list itself he wants to change; there are no programmatic steps or tables here to help you reshuffle daily tasks. What you'll find instead is a remarkably liberating and persuasive inquiry into what it takes to work successfully and with a personal sense of satisfaction. The first thing you'll realize is that it takes more than just one person to do a job well. This is a toppling revelation made all the more powerful by Gawande's skillful blend of anecdote and practical wisdom as he profiles his own experience as a surgeon and seeks out a wide range of other professions to show that a team is only as strong as its checklist--by his definition, a way of organizing that empowers people at all levels to put their best knowledge to use, communicate at crucial points, and get things done. Like no other book before it, The Checklist Manifesto is at once a restorative call to action and a welcome voice of reason. --Anne Bartholomew

Amazon Exclusive: Malcolm Gladwell Reviews The Checklist Manifesto

Malcolm Gladwell was named one of TIME magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2005. He is most recently the author of What the Dog Saw (a collection of his writing from The New Yorker) as well as the New York Times bestsellers Outliers, The Tipping Point, and Blink. Read his exclusive Amazon guest review of The Checklist Manifesto:

Over the past decade, through his writing in The New Yorker magazine and his books Complications and Better, Atul Gawande has made a name for himself as a writer of exquisitely crafted meditations on the problems and challenges of modern medicine. His latest book, The Checklist Manifesto, begins on familiar ground, with his experiences as a surgeon. But before long it becomes clear that he is really interested in a problem that afflicts virtually every aspect of the modern world--and that is how professionals deal with the increasing complexity of their responsibilities. It has been years since I read a book so powerful and so thought-provoking.

Gawande begins by making a distinction between errors of ignorance (mistakes we make because we don't know enough), and errors of ineptitude (mistakes we made because we don’t make proper use of what we know). Failure in the modern world, he writes, is really about the second of these errors, and he walks us through a series of examples from medicine showing how the routine tasks of surgeons have now become so incredibly complicated that mistakes of one kind or another are virtually inevitable: it's just too easy for an otherwise competent doctor to miss a step, or forget to ask a key question or, in the stress and pressure of the moment, to fail to plan properly for every eventuality. Gawande then visits with pilots and the people who build skyscrapers and comes back with a solution. Experts need checklists--literally--written guides that walk them through the key steps in any complex procedure. In the last section of the book, Gawande shows how his research team has taken this idea, developed a safe surgery checklist, and applied it around the world, with staggering success.

The danger, in a review as short as this, is that it makes Gawande’s book seem narrow in focus or prosaic in its conclusions. It is neither. Gawande is a gorgeous writer and storyteller, and the aims of this book are ambitious. Gawande thinks that the modern world requires us to revisit what we mean by expertise: that experts need help, and that progress depends on experts having the humility to concede that they need help. --Malcolm Gladwell


From Publishers Weekly

That humblest of quality-control devices, the checklist, is the key to taming a high-tech economy, argues this stimulating manifesto. Harvard Medical School prof and New Yorker scribe Gawande (Complications) notes that the high-pressure complexities of modern professional occupations overwhelm even their best-trained practitioners; he argues that a disciplined adherence to essential procedures—by ticking them off a list—can prevent potentially fatal mistakes and corner cutting. He examines checklists in aviation, construction, and investing, but focuses on medicine, where checklists mandating simple measures like hand washing have dramatically reduced hospital-caused infections and other complications. Gawande gets slightly intoxicated over checklists, celebrating their most banal manifestations as promethean breakthroughs (First there was the recipe, the most basic checklist of all, he intones in a restaurant kitchen). He's at his best delivering his usual rich, insightful reportage on medical practice, where checklists have the subversive effect of puncturing the cult of physician infallibility and fostering communication and teamwork. (After writing a checklist for his specialty, surgery, he is chagrined when it catches his own disastrous lapses.) Gawande gives a vivid, punchy exposition of an intriguing idea: that by-the-book routine trumps individual prowess. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0030V0PEW
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Metropolitan Books; 1st edition (December 15, 2009)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ December 15, 2009
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1947 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 225 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 13,843 ratings

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Atul Gawande
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Atul Gawande is the author of three bestselling books: Complications, a finalist for the National Book Award; Better, selected by Amazon.com as one of the ten best books of 2007; and The Checklist Manifesto. He is also a surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, a staff writer for The New Yorker since 1998, and a professor at Harvard Medical School and the Harvard School of Public Health. He has won two National Magazine Awards, a MacArthur Fellowship, and been named one of the world's hundred most influential thinkers by Foreign Policy and TIME. In his work as a public health researcher, he is Director of Ariadne Labs a joint center for health system innovation. And he is also co-founder and chairman of Lifebox, a global not-for-profit implementing systems and technologies to reduce surgical deaths globally. He and his wife have three children and live in Newton, Massachusetts.

You can find more at http://www.atulgawande.com.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
13,843 global ratings
It Will Make You Re-Evaluate Checklists
5 Stars
It Will Make You Re-Evaluate Checklists
This book was eye-opening. Atul breaks down the importance of the use of checklists in the workplace across different industries to include Aviation, Healthcare, and even Engineering/Project Management. It made me realize how checklists can minimize or even totally prevent human error. Great read!
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2010
Atul Gawande has succinctly described the usage of checklists in different scenarios and how they help cope with the complexities in different areas involved in our day to day lives. Starting with Aviation which has pioneered the concept of a checklist as far back as the early twentieth century to help fly the then complex fighter aircraft B17 which was nicknamed the "flying fortress". A disaster, resulting from a pilot error due to a missed procedural step, on the first flight, led to the origination of a checklist. Since then all pilots, starting from the lowest 2 seater aircraft to the lofty space shuttle, are trained to use checklists to start an engine, taxi, take off, cruise, land, shut off the engine, and deal with any emergency encountered.

Chefs at famous restaurants routinely use recipes, which are a form of a checklist, to get the dish consistently right each time. It does not mean that a checklist is a static piece engraved in stone. It can be updated to reflect improvements. Gawande describes the crash of a British Airways Boeing 777 flight in January 2008. Flying over the North pole from Beijing into London, both of its engines lost power and crashed just a couple of miles short of the runway. The cause was speculated to be formation of ice crystals in the fuel lines. A recommendation was made to reduce the power for a few seconds in such cases, instead of increasing it, to reduce fuel and ice crystals in the fuel lines. This gives a chance for the heat exchanger to kick in and melt the ice crystals. The improved check list saved the day later that year for a Delta Airlines polar flight from Shanghai to Atlanta. Ice crystals formed in the Boeing 777 fuel lines while flying over Montana. The pilots reduced the power for a while and then increased it to recover the engines.

Checklists are used in cases where a lot of specialists are involved in executing numerous steps correctly to create an end product. An example is the construction industry. Master builders had built the famous buildings in the past like the Notre Dame and the US Capitol. Contemporary skyscrapers are so complex and involve so many specialities that the master builder has become an extinct specie. Better co-ordination and tracking thru checklists are the hallmarks of the construction industry which has become pretty efficient.

I was surprised to read Gawande mention that health care professionals do not use a checklist to deal with thousands of different procedures. Since I come from an Information Technology background, where checklists are commonly used, though not as often as in Aviation, I was ground in the checklist tradition arising out of my passion for flying small planes. By the same token, it is not surprising given that thehealth care field scores very low in the usage of Information Technology. Much of the records are paper based which contribute to low productivity, human errors, and high costs.

The crux of the book is the documentation by Gawande of an important case study undertaken for WHO to introduce the usage of a checklist in surgeries across 8 different hospitals in different parts of the world. In all the cases, there was significant improvement in the quality of the surgical procedures, drastic reduction in human errors and the resulting fatalities. The most common problem before the introduction of the checklist was the infection of lines in Intensive Care Units. Infections also resulted from doctors not washing their hands periodically, although this has been emphasized more than 150 years ago by Dr. Ignaz Semmelweis. Gawande wrote extensively about this problem in his earlier book "Better". This case study led to the acceptance of checklists by the hospitals.

This book concludes with the idea that checklists are making inroads into hospitals and are significantly bettering the outcomes of thousands of medical procedures performed every day.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2024
Great book, it should be required reading for all medical patients, doctors and nurses. It’s also a great book for managers responsible for managing processes.
Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2017
The author, Dr Atul Gawande is an American general and endocrine surgeon, and public health researcher. I have been meaning to read and review his book for many years. What a fitting introduction to ‘The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right.’
Philosophers Samuel Gorovitz and Alasdair MacIntyre tackled the issue of why we fail at what we set out to do in the world. One reason, they explain is “necessary fallibility”, a consequence of some things in the world, and our lives, being beyond our understanding and control.
But there is much that is not, and yet we fail at these too. Gorovitz and MacIntyre suggest that there are two reasons for this: ignorance and ineptitude (incompetence or clumsiness.)
For most of human history, people’s lives have been lived largely in ignorance. However, over the last few decades, science has filled in enough knowledge to make our ‘ineptitude’ as much of a challenge as our ‘ignorance’ was in the past.
Gawande’s context is the ineptitude in medicine. While our knowledge and sophistication has grown enormously, the struggle is still how to deliver on this know-how.
The knowing-doing gap is found everywhere. From the frequent mistakes authorities make when disaster strikes, to the legal mistakes our lawyers make that are the result of little more than simple administrative errors.
“Every day there is more and more to manage and get right and learn,” Gawande points out. With all we are required to manage, failure happens far more often - despite great effort rather than from a lack of it.
Expertise has been seen as the solution to ineptitude in most areas of work – “they need more training!” and modern medicine has been no different. But capability clearly isn’t our primary difficulty; in most fields training is longer and more intense than ever. In the early twentieth century, you could practice medicine with only a high school diploma and a one-year medical degree. Today doctors have six years of university, and three to seven years of residency to practice paediatrics, surgery, neurology, or the like.
Yet our failures remain frequent, but there is a solution – checklists.
Though this seems almost ridiculous in its simplicity - especially to those of us who have spent years carefully developing ever more advanced skills - it has proven not to be.
In 1935 the US Army was looking for the next generation long-range bomber. Boeing’s aluminium-alloy Model 299 was able to carry five times as many bombs as the army had requested, and could fly faster and farther than previous bombers. The army planned to order at least 65 planes until it stalled on a test flight, turned on one wing, and exploded. The crash, attributed to ‘pilot error, killed 2 of the 5 crew members. This prompted Boeing to come up with an ingeniously simple approach: they created a pilot’s checklist. It is worth noting that using a checklist for takeoff was about as odd as using a checklist to back out of your garage.
However, flying this new plane was too complicated to be left to the memory of any person, no matter how expert. The test pilots made checklists for takeoff, flight, landing, and taxiing, and armed with the checklist, flew a total of 1.8 million miles without one accident. The army ultimately ordered almost 13,000 planes.
Like flying, many areas of our lives and work have become “too much airplane for one person to fly.”
Faulty memory and distraction are a constant danger in “all-or-none processes” like going to the shop to buy ingredients for a cake, piloting a plane through a takeoff, or treating a sick person in the hospital. “If you miss just one key thing, you might as well not have made the effort at all,” says Gawande.
Another human danger you may well recognize, is allowing yourself to skip steps even when you remember them. You skip steps because it has never been a problem before – until one day it is.
Checklists can provide protection against such lapses, as they remind us of the minimum necessary steps.
Professors Zimmerman and Glouberman distinguish between 3 different kinds of problems: the simple, the complicated, and the complex.
‘Simple problems’ are ones like baking a cake from a recipe with a few basic techniques you need to learn. Master them and you most likely will have success.
‘Complicated problems’ are like sending a rocket to the moon. There is no straightforward recipe, and success usually requires many people and great expertise. Unanticipated problems are common, and timing and coordination become serious concerns.
‘Complex problems’ are like raising a child. You can’t repeat and perfect the process as you can with rockets. Every child is unique, and while expertise is valuable, it is not sufficient. The outcome remains highly uncertain.
The value of checklists for simple problems is self-evident: that is why we have a shopping list. But much of the most critical work people do, is not simple. Checklists help prevent failure especially when the problems combine everything from the simple to the complex.
The real value of checklists is in conditions of true complexity, where the knowledge requirements exceed that of any individual, and unpredictability reigns. Commands and control from the centre will fail. Under these conditions, not only are checklists a help, they are essential for success. In these complex situations where individuals must exercise their own judgement, this judgement will be enhanced by checklist procedures.

Bad checklists are vague and imprecise, too long and hard to use. They are written as if the people using them are stupid, and they try to spell out every single step. Good checklists, are precise and begin with the premise that a checklist cannot fly a plane. That is why, faced with catastrophe, pilots are astonishingly willing to turn to their checklists.
Checklists come in two forms: DO-CONFIRM and READ-DO. Using a DO-CONFIRM checklist, people do jobs from memory and experience, then stop and check. Using a READ-DO checklist, people carry out the tasks as they check them off, like a recipe.
To get value from checklists, they must make sense for the particular situation. A rule-of-thumb is to keep it to between five and nine items, simply worded, and exact.
Does this work? This was rigorously tested in the World Health Organization’s ‘safe surgery’ research across a variety of hospitals of different sizes, rich and poor, in countries from Tanzania to the US. In this carefully constructed study, a 2-minute, 19 step surgery checklist, resulted in an immediate drop in infection and mortality in thousands of operations in 8 participating hospitals. Major complications dropped 36%, and deaths fell by 47%.
That is how much a checklist can add to the skills of highly trained, highly skilled surgeons. It is worth a serious try in your business. You will get startling results too.
Readability Light ---+- Serious
Insights High +---- Low
Practical High +---- Low

*Ian Mann of Gateways consults internationally on leadership and strategy, and is the author of the recently released Executive
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Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2024
I enjoyed this very interesting and fascinating book. It was well written and captivating. It was also a little frightening.

Top reviews from other countries

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Ross L. Johnson
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book
Reviewed in Canada on January 14, 2024
When I joined the Canadian army 46 years ago I carried a booklet called an Aide Memoire. It was full of checklists for field operations: how to call artillery or air strikes, how to conduct an assault river crossing, etc. Everyone used them. I’d forgotten how useful they are, and this book has motivated me to create and share checklists in my current occupation, security management.
Marcus Weber
5.0 out of 5 stars Prático e capaz de transformar os resultados
Reviewed in Brazil on December 20, 2023
Este é um daqueles livros que abordam de forma direta um assunto prático e com alto potencial de execução e transformação de resultados. O checklist é uma ferramenta, e até uma metodologia, extremamente simples e eficaz, se bem utilizada. Para mim valeu muito a leitura e partir imediatamente para uma implementação aprimorada.
Jorge Enriquez
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente libro
Reviewed in Mexico on April 12, 2023
Si piensas en productividad, te sorprendería ver toda la evidencia de lo poderosa y sencilla que puede ser una Checklist para mejorar en cualquier área profesional.
Nitin Jain
5.0 out of 5 stars Super read
Reviewed in India on March 2, 2024
One of the best engaging read that really makes you think and determined to act.

A highly recommended book for anyone into any profession.
Philipp
5.0 out of 5 stars Ein paar Jahre alt, aber die Erkenntnisse sind weiter gültig!
Reviewed in Germany on June 15, 2022
Gawande führt Schritt für Schritt anhand einfach geschilderter, leicht nachvollziehbarer Begebenheiten aus der Medizin, aber auch aus anderen Branchen wie Fliegerei oder Bauunternehmen, in die Möglichkeit ein, wie man auch in komplexen Prozessen in der Medizin mit Checklisten Risiken minimieren und die Erfolgschancen erhöhen kann.
Das Buch sensibilisiert sehr gut für diese relativ einfache, aber wirkungsvolle Technik und ist als Einstieg zu vestehen, nicht als Praxishandbuch für Fortgeschrittene.
Die Geschichten sind nicht unbedingt brandaktuell, aber in der Aussage weitgehend zeitlos. Das Buch ist als Einführung in einen wichtigen Aspekt des Qualitätsmanagements eine didaktisch gelungene und vor allem leicht verdauliche Lektüre, die man sich auch mal in der Bahn oder im Sommer auf der Wiese zumuten kann.
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