Performance Report 2011

Poster: Changing Work, Changing Lives

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Tue, 04/30/2013 - 17:41
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Format
poster_changing_work_lives

This poster is from the back cover of the 2012 LMP Performance Report.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Changing Work, Changing Lives

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
UBT members, managers, physicians, sponsors

Best used:
Post in working areas and staff break rooms to show that everyone who is a part of Kaiser Permanente can contribute to these three priorities.

 

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Hawaii: Trash Talk Turns a Center Green

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Mon, 10/31/2011 - 15:13
Region
Topics
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pr2011_Hawaii_story
Long Teaser

The recycling ethic has spread throughout the Moanalua Medical Center in Honolulu, an example of how UBTs are sharing effective practices.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Carolyn Sandison, RN, suggested a recycling project after seeing an LMP poster on a team in Southern California.
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Highlighted stories and tools (reporters)
The project that inspired Hawaii team

Find out about a recyling project in Southern California--and learn more about how other teams are going green.

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Story body part 1

The Moanalua Medical Center in Honolulu is saving the planet, one unit-based team at a time.

The Ambulatory Surgery Recovery UBT started collecting small bags of recyclables on its own in March. But team members resorted to some “trash talking,” and now the entire medical center collects about 30 pounds of recyclables each week.

“The original goal was to help our aina (land) thrive,” says Avis Yasumura, RN, the team’s union co-lead and member of the Hawaii Nurses Association, OPEIU Local 50. “Being on an island, there are limited space and resources.”

Methods of spread: A facility UBT fair, a UBT newsletter, PowerPoint presentations and bulletin board posters inspire others and deliver ideas for getting started.

Effective practice: Medical supplies that used to be trash are now recycled, helping to save the planet while saving Kaiser Permanente money.

The region estimates that since October 2010, the recycling has diverted 7.1 tons from the landfill and saved several hundred dollars in recycling fees.

The ASR team started by identifying items on its unit that a local vendor was willing to collect and recycle: irrigation bags, wrappers for intravenous tubing and operating room “peel packs” (sterile wraps for drapes, instruments, gowns and gloves). The team used tests of change to successfully gather and segregate the items.

ASR shared its effective practices in several ways, including:

  • a PowerPoint presentation on products that can be recycled
  • “Going Green” editions of its UBT newsletter and fliers with pictures of recyclables
  • helping other units order blue recycle containers and arranging for pick up with the EVS department

The team also promoted the project at Hawaii’s first UBT fair, with a colorful storyboard display, complete with examples of recyclable products.

“It was the talk of the UBT fair,” says ASR co-lead Janet Lundberg, nurse manager of procedural sedation. “This recognition inspires all UBTs to take risks.”

More than 10 teams at the 300-bed center are recycling now.

Where did the ASR unit get the recycling bug in the first place? Carolyn Sandison, an HNA nurse, was inspired by an LMP bulletin board poster in her break room about the blue-wrap recycling project at Sand Canyon Surgicenter in Southern California.

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