Imagining Care Anywhere

Decoding the Future

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Wed, 04/02/2014 - 16:43
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Jobs are changing, fast. The cover story from the Spring 2014 Hank shows how LMP is helping Kaiser Permanente prepare, even when it's not clear what the changes will be.

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Tyra Ferlatte
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Gerard Corros, RN, and his UNAC/UHCP colleagues check out the Imagining Care Anywhere exhibit.
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Jobs are changing, fast. How do you prepare when you don’t know what the change will be?
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See your doctor without leaving home? The house call of the future may be via your smartphone.

A visiting home health care nurse may one day live-stream exam information via a wearable device like Google Glass, speeding up the treatment process.

Or maybe you’ll be dropping in for a check-up at the clinic in your local shopping mall.

No one can say for sure which ideas will take hold, how long before those ideas morph again and how jobs will be affected. The good news is, we’ve successfully managed widescale change before.

“Changes in health care mean there will be job losses and job growth,” says Jessica Butz, the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions’ national program coordinator for Workforce Planning and Development. “But in the long run, the new skills needed are good for workers and for our patients and members. We have options and support to make the transition work for us, and we’ll have better, more secure jobs.”

Joyce Lee, a Steelworkers Local 7600 member and a former imaging transcriptionist at Fontana Medical Center in Southern California, can speak to the truth of that. Four years ago, a new voice-to-text technology made her job obsolete. She now works as a phlebotomist, a job she always wanted.

“One of the things I’ve always loved about Kaiser is that you can have many careers here, you can be as good as you can be,” Lee says. “I got great support from my union, my manager and my career counselor.”

In the mid-2000s, thousands of workers across the organization saw their work vanishing as KP HealthConnect® was introduced. Time and again, Labor Management Partnership resources and safeguards not only kept individuals employed, but led to new skills and jobs within Kaiser Permanente that paid as well or better.

As KP implements new care delivery models, having a workforce planning and development program that draws on the input and experience of the workforce will help ensure smoother transitions and keep costs down.

“We want individual workers, teams and the whole organization not merely to survive change, but to thrive on change. We used partnership to do just that with HealthConnect,” says Hal Ruddick, executive director of the union coalition. “We don’t need to reinvent the wheel—we just need to get rolling on joint planning and implementation.”

Early engagement required

What all the new care models will look like is still taking shape. Despite the uncertainties, leaders recognize the need to start thinking now about how changing technology will affect the workforce. It’s becoming clear people will need to be trained for team-based care, to work seamlessly across different care settings and be technologically skilled or able to learn those skills.

“We have an opportunity—both labor and management—to lead on the new care models and to get ahead of those changes and get it right,” says Zeth Ajemian, the director of Workforce Planning and Development for Southern California and Hawaii. “It requires early engagement and flexibility.”

Remembering what we’ve already learned will help. The implementation of both KP HealthConnect and the coding process known as ICD-10 provides valuable case studies.

In 2009, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced a big change for health care providers: The International Classification of Diseases, 9th Edition, known as ICD-9, would be replaced by ICD-10, which contains about 144,000 diagnosis and procedure codes. The changeover, now scheduled for Oct. 1, has meant 166 applications—including billing and claims systems in each region—needed to be upgraded, replaced or retired.

In addition, some 1,400 coders and many others needed retraining. Union coalition members are covered by the Employment and Income Security Agreement, which provides for retraining, redeployment and at least one year’s protection from layoffs due to process improvements or restructuring.

“Our ability to work collaboratively in partnership—and recognize workforce issues as part of our strategy—is huge,” says Laura Long, the director of National Workforce Planning and Development. “We need to look at the impacts on the workforce and the skills sets needed for the future. We can’t just flip a switch.”

Identifying potential problems

So KP and the coalition took a page from the KP HealthConnect playbook, when Kaiser Permanente leadership reached out to the unions.

“We had conversations about why the change was important and what it would look like,” says Marie Hamilton, RN, who was the national labor coordinator for KP HealthConnect implementation and is now the labor partner for OFNHP at Westside Medical Center in the Northwest. “Part of the implementation was making sure people got the skills they needed.”

The process was not pain-free, but by engaging the workforce, she says, “Kaiser got buy-in from the people using the system and identified potential problems early on. It was the most impressive thing I’ve seen in 40 years at Kaiser—a model that demonstrates how working in partnership can effectively manage sustainable change.”

When that engagement is missing, the repercussions can be far-reaching. Last year, for example, a decision to reduce or redeploy nurses in Southern California led to a pull-back in union support for unit-based teams in the region. The dispute was resolved, but it illustrated the risk of going it alone.

“In times of change, it can be tempting for both sides to fall back on old habits and traditional approaches—and we know where that gets you,” says Dennis Dabney, the senior vice president of National Labor Relations and Office of Labor Management Partnership. “The test of any partnership is working your way through tough issues and getting better results. That's what we are committed to do."

The joint approach to ICD-10 has included national “communities of practice”—with representation from frontline workers—to design training and make policy and budgeting decisions. Regular updates keep affected employees informed and let them air concerns.

One very specific payoff to the approach: The labor-management team in Colorado found serious flaws in a claims and billing system being developed by outside vendors. KP switched vendors and avoided a potentially disastrous disruption.

 

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Peer Advice: Imagining Care Anywhere

Submitted by Andrea Buffa on Wed, 04/02/2014 - 16:38
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Dan Weberg, director of nursing innovation at the Garfield Innovation Center, talks about how emerging technology might change the way we do our work. From the Spring 2014 Hank.

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Tyra Ferlatte
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Dan Weberg demonstrates to a group of nurses at a UNAC/UHCP steward meeting how electronics may change care delivery.
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Frontline Thoughts

Technology, both current and emerging, is changing the nature of health care and the way we work.

Hear what a group of UNAC/UHCP nurses had to say after viewing the Imagining Care Anywhere exhibit.

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The Imagining Care Anywhere exhibit, created by Kaiser Permanente’s Innovation and Advanced Technology team and the Garfield Innovation Center, illustrates how current and emerging technology makes it possible to bring health care directly to a patient’s home—or wherever a member may be—and can transform the way care is delivered at the doctor’s office and in the hospital. Dan Weberg is director of nursing innovation at the Garfield center and has been traveling to Kaiser Permanente facilities, conferences and union meetings to talk with people at all levels of the organization about the exhibit. He was interviewed by LMP Communications Director Andrea Buffa.

Q. As director of nursing innovation, what kind of work do you do?

A. I have a really great job. I’m supposed to help envision the future about three to five years from now and figure out what technologies, what trends, what changes in nursing practices and what changes in health care might occur. And then help guide pilot projects and strategy and brainstorming sessions to move the organization toward that future.

Q. What is the Imagining Care Anywhere exhibit about?

A. Imagining Care Anywhere is the start of a conversation with everyone at Kaiser Permanente to create a vision of what it might look like in the future as we engage members no matter where they are. How can we seamlessly integrate their home life, their school life, their work life and their health interactions with Kaiser all together? How can we help people have a more healthy lifestyle or healthy work-life balance? It’s a tour that’s supposed to provoke people to think about and imagine what that care will look like.

Q. How are emerging technologies changing the future of health care?

A. One example is the smartphone. Many of us use it for everything from tracking our fitness goals to shopping lists to emails to Facebook. But the data and the information behind that can be integrated in with goals for your health life. We’re working on a project now called Profile and Preferences. You might be able to set personal health goals and then use the data you collect already—whether it’s through a fitness app or diet tracking—and upload that into your kp.org profile so you can see how you’re moving along with your goals. And then, when you meet with your care team, we have a better picture of who you are as a person, and we can help you facilitate your goals. Remote diagnostics and remote monitoring are a big deal now, too.

Q. What do you think virtual visits will look like?

A. There are several organizations now that do tele-visits, including Kaiser. I think the future is going to hold more of these as our TVs and our cable providers get faster and faster internet and smarter devices. It may not be a full visit, but it may be a way to engage with a care provider—whether it’s a nurse, a physician, some sort of navigator or a health coach. Keeping people from having to drive into one of our facilities for simple things is going to be key.

Q. How are things going to be different when people are in the hospital?

A. In the exhibit, there’s a “journey home” board, which allows members to know exactly what has to happen before they get discharged. They don’t have to continue asking the nurse or the doctor or the care team by clicking the call light—they can see it right there and they’re able to access it.

The board is also about answering their questions conveniently and in a way they can understand. The exhibit has the idea of using an avatar. After a nurse or teacher comes in to do some kind of education, the member still has some questions. Instead of having to ask the same questions over and over and feeling a little uncomfortable, they’re able to use a virtual person to answer them.

Q. How can KP support its employees and help them advance their careers as these changes begin to take place?

A. I think as an institution we need to keep thinking about how we evolve our roles, what are the things we need to do differently. The technology is coming whether we want it or not, so it’s about continuing to imagine how specific roles might change and coming up with strategies to train our workforce to be able to evolve with the technology.

Q. What role are the labor unions that represent KP’s employees playing?

A. We’re really excited about the engagement with the unions. I think it’s great that they’re using Imagining Care Anywhere as a springboard to talk to their constituents about how the future of health care is going to evolve and also work to create that future with us.

The front line should be driving this because they know what’s broken. And they can help us address that early, before we get too far down the road with a solution that may not meet the real need.

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The Human Touch

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Wed, 04/02/2014 - 16:37
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Long Teaser

UNAC/UHCP members speak out emerging technology and the importance of preserving the human touch in health care. From the Spring 2014 Hank.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Gerard Corros, RN and UNAC/UHCP member
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What Will the Future Bring?

Read more about how LMP and KP are planning for the future.

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Nurses' thoughts about a traveling version of the Imagining Care Anywhere exhibit
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A January UNAC/UHCP steward meeting in Southern California included a traveling version of the Imagining Care Anywhere exhibit, and nurses across Southern California weighed in with their thoughts about the emerging technologies.

Gracie Johnstone, RN
Kern County

Our dermatologist left and we didn’t have one for a while. We did “tele-derm” with a doctor in Orange County. We trained the medical office assistants on how to set up the technology. We could do the biopsies, if needed, at Kern. It evolved really nicely. It saves a visit for the patient. I don’t think all this technology will take jobs from nurses because we still need the human touch. Nurses will become more techno-savvy.

Pam Brodersen, NP
Downey Medical Center

It’s great, but we have to slow down a bit. We don’t want to become an app. We still need that human connection.

Yoshini Perera, RN
Downey Medical Center

I love change, but I’m a little concerned we might get out of touch with the patient. As long as we can listen to and touch and feel the patient, that’s OK.

Nelly Garcia, RN
Panorama City Medical Center

I am concerned about the ability of computer systems to communicate with each other. We need to get the systems to connect in order to provide the best service.

Gerard Corros, RN
Irvine Medical Center

It’s like having a Ferrari all of a sudden. You can drive really fast, but you need speed limits.

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