Team Discovers Key Savings Through Prescription Transfers
- Identifying high-cost medications filled outside of KP pharmacies
- Developing scripting
- Reaching out to Kaiser Permanente members
Help your team on the road to financial wellness with tools and resources from Kaiser Permanente.
Eight quick hits, one from each region, on the performance improvement work being done in partnership in each region. From the Summer 2013 Hank.
This postcard, which appears in the January/February 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features a Gastroenterology team from Georgia that worked on reducing costs by hiring fewer contract physicians and working on scheduling of nurses, physicians and patients.
Look at your work areas and workflows in a new way. These categories will help teams root out waste and solve for affordability.
Staff members at the Primary Care department at the Bonita Medical Office in San Diego, Calif., found that when they streamlined supply orders, they saved far more than they had expected. Watch their story and become inspired.
Unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente are looking for innovative ways to improve their work and save money, too. Staff members at the Primary Care department at the Bonita Medical Office in San Diego, Calif., found that when they streamlined supply orders, they saved far more than they had expected. And while there were some minor hiccups, it wasn’t as hard as they expected, either. Watch their story and become inspired.
This poster, which appeared in the November/December 2012 Bulletin Board Packet, offers tips for reducing supply waste.
For a nurse on a hospital ward, it might seem quick and easy to grab the nearest sheet to mop up a spill or grab a huge stack of blankets to put in a patient’s room.
But for the Materials Management department at Panorama City Medical Center, that can be really wasteful.
And they should know. They’re the team responsible for purchasing and cleaning linens, and keeping patients comfortable.
With savings in mind, the materials UBT looked to educate other hospital staff about the true costs of buying and washing linens.
Managers and union members worked together to create a storyboard featuring photos of bed sheets used as a tablecloth at a barbeque, and price lists of supplies and laundering charges. And because the team piloted its effort in Maternal Child Health departments, it also included pictures of babies.
As the materials staff worked with the other teams, the storyboard was a big confidence booster to those who were not public speakers.
“At first I was really nervous,” says Sandra Hernandez, the team’s labor co-lead. “But then I saw people I knew in the room and that put me at ease.”
The team also reviewed linen usage and stocking levels with departments.
And their efforts paid off as they reduced the overall annual cost of linen in the Maternal Child Health department by 6.8 percent, more than three times the original goal.
They also were able to increase customer satisfaction scores in a year from 48 to 65 percent from internal clients such as inpatient units at the hospital,.
“It is important to be prepared with the data,” says management co-lead Steve Spickler. “But, you need to tell a story in addition to the charts. That’s how the UBTs make the connection between their contribution and the financial success of the organization.”
The materials management team at Panorama City Medical Center helped educate inpatient units about the high price of using linens inappropriately, saving thousands of dollars in wasted laundry and replacement costs.
Find out what unit-based teams are doing to successfully collect copayments, generate revenue for KP and improve affordability.