Fall 2014

From the Desk of Henrietta: Mind, Body, Service

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Mon, 09/19/2016 - 15:41
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Our bodies need best quality, and our spirits need best service. Henrietta, the resident columnist of the quarterly magazine Hank, makes an argument for including patients in performance improvement. From the Fall 2014 issue.

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This time, I was the patient. I’m confident I received the right care at the right time. The removal of a suspicious polyp may have averted colon cancer a few decades hence. I’m grateful for that.

But I wouldn’t say I was “at the center” of my care team’s processes. My interaction brought home for me the theme of this issue of Hank, how we can improve care by asking members to participate in performance improvement. Previous patients could have told my team:

The instructions given to members on prepping for a colonoscopy don’t mention that the effects of the purgatives might take two hours to arrive—and then arrive so urgently you’d better be three steps from the toilet. The prep sheet should note what you can do to be ready.

In the clinic itself, the row of patients lined up on their gurneys don’t need to overhear nurses, somewhat frustrated, adapting to staffing changes. Problem solving is good, but save those discussions for staff areas.

In the procedure room, introduce yourselves—and keep pleasantries appropriate. In my case, one of two nurses remained anonymous. The doctor introduced himself but asked, “How are we doing today?” The “we” was a wrong note; he and I were having distinctly different days

Body and spirit are intertwined, and so, too, are quality and service. Our bodies need “best quality,” our spirits need “best service.” Best care addresses both. Patients know better than anyone what best service looks like. Find ways to invite their voices into your team’s work.

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Around the Regions (Fall 2014)

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Mon, 09/19/2016 - 15:40
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sty_Around the Regions_Fall2014
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Newsy notes from all of KP's regions. From the Fall 2014 issue of Hank.

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Laureen Lazarovici
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Members of the Labor and Delivery UBT at South Bay Medical Center in Southern California, a high-performing team
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Around the Regions (Fall 2014)
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Colorado

Spurred on by a Performance Sharing Program goal, UBTs in the region are focusing on affordability and efficiency by taking on improvement projects with identified cost savings or revenue capture. Teams are finding ways to work together. For example, the Stapleton Cytology and Molecular lab teams increased productivity by cross-training and solving problems together. As of August 2014, the teams are processing five times more HPV screenings a month than in 2012. The region also is celebrating strong membership growth.

Georgia

Clinicians know a lot about medicine and less about the health insurance benefits their patients have. Members of the unit-based team at the Douglasville Medical Office knew that frustrated patients. They set out in July 2013 to improve the staff’s understanding of member benefits through an ambitious 12-week training session. Before starting the weekly classes, staff members scored an average of 68.5 percent on a test about member benefits. By the end of October, their average score was 95 percent. The team credits its newfound business literacy for boosting service scores, which helped Kaiser Permanente retain a major city account and win a new one. 

Hawaii

More than 1,000 new health plan members joined Kaiser Permanente this summer, thanks to the collaboration between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of KP Unions to grow KP membership. The effort started in May with a strong presence at a conference of the Hawaii Government Employees Association—one of six unions covered by the state Employees’ Retirement System, KP Hawaii’s largest customer. Conference delegates visited the KP booth, took Body Mass Index (BMI) readings and participated in a KP-sponsored walk. KP followed up with mailers to prospective members, presentations to union retirees, invitations to tour KP facilities and more. Lynn Ching, labor liaison for the Labor Management Partnership in Hawaii, and Troy Tomita, a KP senior account manager, worked on the project together. “It’s a great headstart for open enrollment in October,” Ching says. 

Mid-Atlantic States

Members of the Ambulatory Surgery Center unit-based team in Gaithersburg, Md., not only are putting the patient at the center of every effort, but also bringing the patient’s family members and friends into the fold. The team created a perioperative liaison role, in which a staff person is assigned to a patient and acts as point person, updating a patient’s friends or family members throughout the patient’s journey through the surgery center. After creating the new role in February 2014, the surgery center’s service scores jumped from 75.8 percent in January 2014 to 88.8 percent in April 2014.

Northern California

Fremont Medical Center employees took all obstacles in stride when it came to adding physical activity to their workday as part of the KP-wide Instant Recess® week in early August. Nearly 200 Fremont workers Hula-Hooped, boxed, danced, hop-scotched and jump-roped as part of the facility’s Instant Recess obstacle course. Usually, Instant Recess is a 5- to 10-minute activity done to music, but it also can be any kind of fun activity that gets people moving. The San Francisco, Richmond and San Rafael medical centers were among the other Northern California locations that joined in the week of Instant Recess, which was organized by national and regional Workforce Wellness programs and the union coalition.

Northwest

Working through unit-based teams, the region has launched a new focus on affordability. The UBT Resource Team is leading the charge by providing such resources as a project template and performance improvement tools, including 6S and the Waste Walk, as it works with teams. In addition, teams can reach out to subject matter experts in finance, purchasing and other areas for assistance. The region’s UBT Data Team will calculate the return on investment of the efforts and enter that information into UBT Tracker. Some teams, such as the Rockwood Medical Office Patient Registration UBT, are working on reducing paper registration forms to cut down on waste and save money.

Southern California

Leaders at the South Bay Medical Center hosted a performance improvement fair for unit-based teams this summer, aimed at giving teams the tools they need to reach levels 4 and 5 on the Path to Performance. After grabbing some healthy snacks at the sign-in table, UBT co-lead pairs sat with an improvement advisor or UBT consultant and got customized advice on how to move their projects forward. For instance, the union co-lead from a medical-surgical unit reviewed data collection techniques at one table, while at another, food and nutrition team members filled out a fishbone diagram for their efforts to collect errant cafeteria trays. Co-leads got help entering their projects into UBT Tracker, then left with a packet of performance improvement tools.

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Icebreaker: What's Your Question?

Submitted by Beverly White on Thu, 10/30/2014 - 18:15
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Running Your Team
Hank
hank41_meeting_icebreakers_what's_your_question?

Use this meeting icebreaker to get to know team members better. From the Fall 2014 Hank.

Beverly White
Tyra Ferlatte
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Icebreaker: What's Your Question?

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8.5” x 11”

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Frontline employees, managers and physicians

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Use this meeting icebreaker to get to know team members better. From the Fall 2014 Hank.

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Hank Fall 2014

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Intended audience:  Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used: Download the PDF or read the issue online by using the links below.

Giving Patients a Voice

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 10/03/2014 - 18:38
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Unit-based teams bring the voice of frontline workers, managers and physicians to improving health care at Kaiser Permanente. Some UBTs go one step further and include the patient voice. Find out how they do it.

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Laureen Lazarovici
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Teo's stay in the NICU after he was born led dad Trav Ichinose to become an active member of the team's parent advisory council, contributing his voice to improving performance.
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Giving Patients a Voice
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How UBTs are listening to members
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On her last day at work before going on maternity leave, something started going wrong with Juanita Ichinose’s pregnancy—and she found herself in an ambulance, on her way to the Downey Medical Center. Her husband, Trav, followed in his car. The images from an ultrasound foretold a grim story: Juanita was expecting twins, but one of the boys was not moving. “Code Pink” began blaring from the overhead speakers as she was wheeled to the operating room. What caregivers and the family feared came to pass. One twin survived, but the other did not.

“We had some moments with our other son,” says Trav Ichinose. “Then I went to see Teo. He weighed a pound and a half. The doctor told me, ‘He is very small.’”

Thus began Teo Ichinose’s four-month stay in the neonatal intensive care unit, a journey that led his father to become an active member of the department’s parent advisory council. Today, Teo is a happy 4-year-old, obsessed with his toy airplane from the latest Disney movie. And his father continues to bring the voice of the patient to Downey’s NICU unit-based team, where his input has helped shape numerous improvements.

UBTs exist to include all voices—employees, managers and physicians—in efforts to improve performance. And some UBTs are bringing in one more crucial voice: the patient’s.

To be sure, there are UBT members who resist. Objections range from “we don’t have time” to “patients can’t possibly know how our department runs.” But for others, it is a step that literally brings the patient-and-member focus of the Value Compass to life.

“UBTs have a lot of expertise. They know what is and isn’t working,” says Hannah King, director for service quality for unit-based teams. “What is missing is the perspective of the user, someone who might be afraid or in pain. We don’t know what they go through before and after they come to us. So we need to ask.”

Read on to see how UBTs have included patients and members in their work and improved performance.

Whose handoff is this, anyhow?
Downey NICU finds a way to keep parents involved during shift changes

During his son’s four-month stay in the NICU, Trav Ichinose became concerned that parents were prevented from visiting during shift changes, when the Nurse Knowledge Exchange Plus occurs.

“Parents want to maximize their time with their babies, and the policy was undermining that,” he says.

Nurses wanted to integrate parents into the process but also needed to prevent interruptions. “During the report, the parents tended to interject,” says Marnie Morales, RN, the team’s union co-lead and a UNAC/UHCP member. “That was a safety issue,” because it is important nurses not get sidetracked.

So, together with Ichinose and the parent advisory council, UBT members devised a system that met the needs of caregivers and parents. There would be “quiet time,” when parents listen and jot down notes while the outgoing nurse updates the incoming nurse. Once they’re done, it’s the parents’ turn to discuss their baby’s care with the nurses.

In testing the process, the nurses realized they needed to be able to discuss sensitive information out of the parents’ earshot—if, for example, there was a domestic violence situation or mental health problems in the family. So they came up with a discreet cue that signals the need to step away.

“The patient is getting better care because there is better communication. Information that wasn’t getting shared before is now,” Morales says. “As nurses, we get so involved with charting that we forget the patient is sitting there. Now, we are explaining as we are doing it because the parent is there watching.”

The change gave the team a boost in its satisfaction scores, which rose from 74 percent in the third quarter of 2012 to 88 percent one year later. It works to maintain the scores by holding refresher trainings with staff.

“With long stays like ours, your emotional resilience is tested to the max,” Ichinose says. “There are things that happen in the NICU setting that can undermine that resilience—or bolster it. Bolstering our ability to take in information, to be physically and emotionally present for the care of our child, affects our satisfaction with the care.”

Preserving pride, preventing falls:
A comment provides a San Diego team with fresh insight

Why do patients fall when they are in the hospital? Is it because they are elderly? Or under the influence of medications that affect their balance? The leaders, physicians and nurses at the San Diego Medical Center considered a range of possibilities and tried everything in the usual playbook, posting pictures of falling leaves on patient doors and using color-coded armbands to indicate fall risk. But nothing was working.

Then the UBT on the 5 West medical-surgical unit cared for a patient who was a member of the facility’s patient advisory council—and they asked his wife for her opinion. She said her husband—normally a self-sufficient, strong man—was too embarrassed to call a nurse to help him to the bathroom, especially given that he was wearing a flimsy, possibly revealing hospital gown.

That “aha” moment led the UBT to take a new approach: No one walks alone. Instead of trying to figure out who is at risk for falling, caregivers would treat everyone as a fall risk and provide assistance. The pilot program was so successful that it is being spread to the entire hospital. Before the campaign began in November 2012, the hospital had been averaging 16 falls a month. In June 2014, that figure was 3.4 a month.

Seeing the experience through the patient’s eyes was the key to the solution.

“I felt as if I was part of the team, and my input was just as valuable as any other member’s,” says Pat, the patient’s wife (last name withheld at her request). “If you go to patients with the attitude that they will be helping you do your job better, you will get an honest evaluation of what can be done to help, and they can make your job easier and more rewarding.”

Reluctant to change?
Some ideas for including patients as part of a UBT

Sheryl Almendrez, the management co-lead of the Definitive Observation Unit (also called a step-down unit) at the San Diego Medical Center, acknowledges that caregivers on her team were hesitant to have a patient join its improvement work: “They were interested, but were they ready to hear ‘the real truth’?” And what if a chronic complainer ate up valuable time?

As it turns out, there was little to fear. Patients’ requests were reasonable. For example, they want nurses to give them a heads-up when using an ear thermometer. “We’re used to it,” says Almendrez, but they may not know what it is. “They may think it’s an injection coming at them.”

For the Urgent Care unit in Largo, Md., listening to patients’ feedback about long wait times when coming in with a sore throat led that UBT to work with colleagues in the lab to fast-track tests for strep throat.

“Our team was very hesitant about bringing a member in because there could be more complaints than real feedback,” says Donna Fraser, RN, the team’s union co-lead and a member of UFCW Local 400. Making it clear why it was including patients helped: “We told the patient that we want to know what we are doing wrong, because how else will we improve?”

Morales of the Downey NICU says she no longer flinches from criticism, whether or not it’s phrased “constructively.”

 “Some of the people we have on our advisory council are the ones who complained the most,” she says. “You know what? They became the advocates for all the other babies. They helped us change a lot of things on our unit for the better.”

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Learning by Listening: Patient Advisory Councils

Submitted by Jennifer Gladwell on Fri, 10/03/2014 - 18:27
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Hank
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hank41_NW_latino advisory council_jg_tf
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How patient advisory councils are helping improve service and quality by giving a members a forum for sharing their experiences and contributing their ideas. From the Fall 2014 Hank.

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Jennifer Gladwell
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Tyra/Laureen- we don't have a teaser on this. Hi Jennifer, I wrote a teaser for this on Oct. 3. Thanks, Laureen
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A patient advisory council in Southern California meets to discuss service and quality issues.
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Learning by Listening: Patient Advisory Councils
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Kaiser Permanente is inviting patients and families into the boardroom to talk turkey. There’s no sugar-coating a bad experience or making excuses for less-than-stellar service. Listening to our patients has become a core value, and patient advisory councils are one of the ways KP is bringing the patient into the conversation to improve care.

“There are over 35 advisory councils and over 400 patient advisors throughout the organization,” says Hannah King, the director of service quality for unit-based teams.

In the Northwest, as in other regions, the work being done by the councils is affecting outcomes. Within six months of the formation of the Oncology Patient Advisory Council, for example, oncology patient satisfaction scores climbed 6.5 percent. One change prompted by patient feedback was a fresh look at a procedure that sometimes is used in the course of a surgical breast biopsy. After hearing from patients about the pain they were experiencing, physicians standardized the wire localization procedure to reduce pain.

One of the newest councils in the Northwest was created to help serve the region’s growing Hispanic population. Patients on the council have been involved in a video project that will be ready to share with staff by year-end. In the video, Latino patients talk directly to KP care teams about their culture, providing insights into how to build trust and develop good provider-patient relationships.

Patients who serve on the councils are not paid to participate. “These are people who are invested in helping us succeed,” says Jonathan Bullock, program manager for Patient and Family Centered Care Programs in the Northwest.

Given the complexity of an organization as big as Kaiser Permanente, there’s been a learning curve for patients as well. At a recent council meeting in the Northwest, patients expressed frustration that a suggestion to improve signage hadn’t happened. As it turned out, their idea had been incorporated into the master plan—but there’s a schedule for updating signage, and the clinic they were familiar with wasn’t due yet for a refresh.

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Curiosity Leads to Better Service

Submitted by Jennifer Gladwell on Fri, 10/03/2014 - 18:15
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Hank
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hank41_nw_infusion_nurse
Long Teaser

Adopting a best practice from another team, the Infusion Center in the Northwest improves care delivery for its patients. From the Fall 2014 Hank.

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Jennifer Gladwell
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Tyra Ferlatte
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RN Kathy Stafford, a member of the Oregon Nurses Association
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Curiosity Leads to Better Service
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Adopting a best practice from another team, an Infusion Center improves care for patients
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The word “rapid” stopped Kathy Stafford, RN, and made her ask more questions.

Stafford, the UBT co-lead and charge nurse for the Regional Infusion Center in the Northwest, had been reading an email from a Colorado colleague. The colleague wondered whether the center was using a new protocol for Remicade, an infusion drug prescribed for such diseases as Crohn’s, rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatric arthritis. The Colorado infusion center was trying a new “rapid” Remicade delivery method and looking to see what the experience of others had been.

The Northwest still was using the standard method, and Stafford, a member of the Oregon Nurses Association, was instantly curious. A regular Remicade infusion takes 3½ hours—three hours for the delivery of the drug, and then, to be sure there are no adverse effects, the patient has to wait 30 minutes before being discharged. The new protocol reduces that to a total of 1½ hours.

The gift of time

“If there is anything we can do to speed up infusions for our patients,” Stafford says, “it would be a service to them and, at the same time, save the organization money.”

In short, Stafford was putting the patient at the center of her decision making, bringing the Value Compass to life. The rapid Remicade protocol improves the patient’s care experience and improves service, quality, affordability and staff satisfaction:

  • Patients spend less time in the clinic, since both the drug administration time and post-infusion wait time are reduced.
  • Because patients are spending less time in the clinic, more patients can be seen. Up to 16 hours of patient chair time could be opened up every day.
  • Because the clinic can accommodate more patients, fewer patients will be redirected for treatment in the Emergency department or at the regional Oncology department, improving those departments’ ability to serve their primary patients.

“Any chance we have to be more effective is worth it, so we can spend more time with our patients,” Stafford says.

Making it happen

Following up on the initial email inquiry, Stafford learned the evidence-based practice already was being used in Colorado and the California regions. She and Greg Frazier, the assistant department administrator and UBT management co-lead, pushed ahead with getting the protocol approved for use in the Northwest, benefitting all the region’s eligible patients.

“There was no stopping Kathy,” Frazier says. “She knew who to talk to in the organization and how to move things along….

“Our team is always looking at how to do things better, and to take care of the patient the best we can,” Frazier continues. Noting that the infusion team is highly motivated and self-directed, he offered words of encouragement to those who see an opportunity they want to pursue.

“Don’t turn away from a challenge. Ask questions,” he says. “It may not work, but look into it first before you discount it.”

Stafford credits the team for getting the new protocol approved so quickly, despite a complex approval process that included meetings with both physicians and pharmacists.

“Without the enthusiasm and involvement of the infusion RN team, this would not have gone as smoothly,” she says. “We found out about the protocol in March and we began implementation in May. That’s pretty fast.”

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SuperScrubs: Through the Patient's Eyes

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Thu, 10/02/2014 - 12:12
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Keywords
Topics
Hank
hank41_superscrubs_patient

Manny is back to help providers see their care through the experience of the patient. From the Fall 2014 Hank.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
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SuperScrubs: Through the Patient's Eyes

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Intended audience: 
Anyone with a sense of humor

Best used:
Enjoy this comic and be reminded of patient-centered care. 

 

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Hank Libs: Caring for Patients With Heart

Submitted by Beverly White on Thu, 10/02/2014 - 12:01
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Hank
hank41_hanklibs

Break up a team meeting with a little fun with this Hank Lib, a fill-in-the-blanks puzzle about caring for patients with heart. From the Fall 2014 Hank.

Jennifer Gladwell
Tyra Ferlatte
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Hank Libs: Caring for Patients With Heart

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Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used:
Use this Hank Lib to break up a team meeting with some fun about putting patients at the center of your work.

 

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Word Scramble: Patient Participation

Submitted by Beverly White on Thu, 10/02/2014 - 11:58
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Hank
hank41_wordscramble

Use this word scramble to get to the final phrase about involving patients in performance improvement. From the Fall 2014 Hank.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
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Word Scramble: Patient Participation

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Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used:
Unlock key words and phrases that describe involving patients in performance improvement.

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