Communication Drives Success
Courier drivers in the Northwest improve communication and morale after going through an Issue Resolution--and move forward on revamping routes for greater efficiency.
Northwest leads Kaiser Permanente's hospital-based regions in the fewest workplace safety injuries in 2011.
For the second year in a row, the Northwest region experienced the fewest workplace injuries of any hospital-based region in Kaiser Permanente. The Northwest ended the 2011 reporting year with a 15 percent improvement over injury rates in 2010. (The two California regions, Hawaii and the Northwest operate hospitals, while Colorado, Georgia, the Mid-Atlantic States and Ohio do not.)
Workplace Safety Committee co-leads Marilyn Terhaar and Susan McGovern Kinard attribute the region’s success to several factors:
Employee injuries are significant in several ways. An injured employee may lose pay and time at work, and a department may have to work short, which may impact patient care. And there’s a financial impact on the organization—which eventually could affect member premiums.
“The cost to open a workers’ compensation claim is about $1,200 on average,” says Terhaar. “Once you start adding in medical and surgical costs, the expenses can soar.”
Indemnity claims—those claims that cover employees with more serious injuries that require a longer time off—average $21,000.
“That’s one of the reasons we have such a laser focus on safe patient handling. The risk to the employee for injury is so great,” explains McGovern Kinard.
The Northwest region employs a well-constructed safe patient handling program. New employees are trained on safe patient handling, and more than 1,000 employees were retrained in 2011. Hospital and clinic policies require staff to move patients using safe handling techniques and equipment.
“We have mobile lifts and overhead lifts at Kaiser Sunnyside Medical Center and will have the same equipment at our new hospital opening next year,” says Paulette Hawkins, RN, a workplace safety consultant. “In addition, all medical and dental clinics have mobile lifts and receive annual hands-on refresher training on request.”
Members of the workplace safety committee aren’t resting on their laurels. This year, they plan to bring the focus of safety to the UBT level.
“Most teams can solve their own issues,” say McGovern Kinard. “There’s been an increase in awareness that’s been growing steadily over the last five years. Our numbers say it all.”
Some of our youngest members will benefit from having the new test, which came about after a frontline union member approached a doctor about pairing up to get it approved.
“This whole project was a mere idea written on a piece of paper only a few months ago,” says Juan Piantino, MD, “and now it’s a reality.”
Shortly after Dr. Piantino, a neurologist, came to Kaiser Permanente in July 2014, he was approached by another member of the department—Debbie Newcomb, an electro-neurodiagnostic technologist and UFCW Local 555 member. Newcomb’s work includes performing electroencephalograms (EEGs), a test that monitors a patient’s brain waves and helps diagnose patients with epilepsy.
She was interested in implementing ambulatory EEGs (AEEGs), an advanced technology that is relatively new. Because the test is conducted over a longer time period than a routine EEG, it is more likely to capture events that provide the medical team with information needed for a good diagnosis. AEEGs also are less expensive than an inpatient telemetry EEG. But Newcomb needed a physician partner to move forward.
“I wasn’t intimidated about approaching him,” says Newcomb, who’s the labor co-lead of the neurology UBT. “The partnership has given me the confidence to speak up—and in fact, I consider it part of my role as a union steward.”
Dr. Piantino had experience with the test with other health care systems—as did Newcomb—and was enthusiastic. The pair began figuring out how the test could be implemented in the Northwest region. Newcomb collaborated with the staff at the Stanford Comprehensive Epilepsy Center to understand the specific details of its program. She worked with KP Purchasing to identify the type and cost of the machines that would be needed.
Armed with information, Dr. Piantino met with leadership of the Northwest Permanente Medical Group—and within a few short months, in December 2014, the region was equipped to do continuous ambulatory EEGs.
So far this year, 16 patients have had their treatment guided by the ambulatory EEG as outpatients. Because the test is administered with a camera, the physician reading the results can see the patient in real time and correlate the brain activity to the physical movements of the patient. In addition, being able to conduct the test in the patient’s own environment avoids a potentially stressful and expensive hospital stay.
One adult patient had been in and out of the Emergency department five times in two weeks. Newcomb performed the ambulatory EEG on him; he had five events, all pseudo-seizures. “He is now seeing the proper doctor for his problems—no more trips to the ED,” Newcomb says.
By the end of July, the program already had paid for the cost of equipment. The benefits of an accurate diagnosis for the patient are immeasurable.
“It was the positive attitude and the willingness to improve patient care that made this happen in record time,” says Dr. Piantino.
Not all epilepsy is easily identifiable. One young, active child who was recently diagnosed was brought into the Neurology clinic because he was not meeting developmental milestones, and his parents and physician were concerned. The team turned to the ambulatory EEG.
“We got a really good study,” says Dr. Piantino. “This will guide his therapy.”
In another instance, neonatologists at Sunnyside Medical Center were able to control a newborn baby’s seizures within 48 hours when they turned to the ambulatory/continuous monitoring EEG test—after the routine EEG didn’t reveal any unusual brain activity.
“I have been a pediatric neuro-intensivist at two big centers, in Seattle and Chicago,” Dr. Piantino says, “and I can say with confidence that this child received state-of-the-art treatment.”
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Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians
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Share these tips about "fast tracking" service for Emergency Department patients with your team on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.
This postcard, which appears in the January/February 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features an Emergency Department team from the Northwest that developed a "fast track" service for patients and improved service scores.
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.
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.
Courier drivers in the Northwest improve communication and morale after going through an Issue Resolution--and move forward on revamping routes for greater efficiency.
Oncology unit-based team pays attention when it uses which tubing--and saves $25,000 a year.
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5” x 11”
Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians
Best used:
Hang this poster detailing how one UBT improved service and boosted morale on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas. Use it to discuss possible changes with colleagues.
This poster, which appears in the March/April 2014 bulletin board packet, features a Northwest team that has improved lab turnaround times.
Tom Harburg, MD, talks about his experience as a sponsor and the value of having the physician involved in the unit-based team.
Tom Harburg, MD, is the physician in charge at Division Medical Office in the Northwest. He co-sponsors two primary care teams in the medical office along with the medical office manager and their labor partners. “Doctors can’t be cowboys anymore,” says Dr. Harburg, referring to physician Atul Gawande’s New Yorker article “Cowboys and Pit Crews.” Harburg agrees with Gawande that doctors need to work in a team environment and that, as Gawande wrote, “places that function most like a system are most successful…(where) diverse people actually work together to direct their specialized capabilities toward a common goal for patients.” Dr. Harburg talked with LMP communications consultant Jennifer Gladwell about being a sponsor and the value of having the physician involved in the team.
A. As the medical director of the clinic, I work with the medical office manager and labor partners to help sponsor the teams. We help facilitate leadership. I think the strength of the unit-based teams lies with the grassroots approach. The ideas come from the front line. My role is to help build awareness and alignment to the goals of the organization and ensure that our approach is member-centric.
A. The measurement is the biggest barrier. We have to be able to measure our performance to see if what we’re doing has any effect on our patients.
The true benefit of the huddles is communication. There’s a social aspect to in-person huddles that allows you to address issues that pop up. It also facilitates learning and disseminating information—like the first day of a new protocol, you can remind folks at the huddles. I also think it’s a morale builder. Huddles foster good camaraderie. We only have two huddles per week at the clinic, but we have been doing huddles for three years. We’ve changed the time of the huddles based on the clinic hours, and now we’re going back to mornings.
Help your team with these resources.
Tom Harburg, MD, Tom.Harburg@kp.org, 503-772-6314
In this first-person story, a nurse in the Northwest explains how her years of union experience helped her become a better manager.
What happens when things change in your job and you have to rethink what’s always worked in the past?
For me, that moment came two years ago when I moved into a management role. I had spent 24 years as a frontline nurse, union steward and labor partner to hospital administration before my job transition.
Frankly, I wasn’t sure what to expect going in, but having been a steward and a labor partner helped me become a better manager. Kaiser Permanente has given me opportunities to grow as a leader that I don’t believe I would have had elsewhere. Along the way I learned six lessons that I think can help others lead in a collaborative team environment:
As a labor leader, I learned to believe in people and know that there’s always another side to any story. My staff understands they can come to me any time. And our unit-based team helps us draw on everyone’s knowledge and allows everyone to be heard.
In the end, it wasn’t that hard to make the transition from labor leader to manager. In both roles you have to consider diverse points of view, and sometimes you have to step back and ask, “Does it make sense?” You’re not always popular, but I’m OK with that.
We may not always agree. But there is no “we” or “them,” we are all one—because we always put our patients first.
The MRI unit at Kaiser Sunnyside Medical Center had a challenge.
The department was receiving an average of 120 cases each day, but they were able to see only 71. As a result, patients were being referred outside of the Kaiser Permanente system. This drove up referral costs, inconvenienced KP members, and increased dissatisfaction.
In addition, referring patients to outside services posed a delay in getting results back to the ordering doctors. Schedulers who received the request for appointments also had a tough job—when they were not able to accommodate patients within the KP system, they had to make arrangements with outside services, which took additional time.
And finally, the patients didn’t like it.
The feedback from patients to department manager David Barry, was that they didn’t want to have to go elsewhere for services. Patients preferred to have their MRIs performed at the Sunnyside Medical Center.
The team's first step was to increase capacity to see more patients and reduce outside referrals by at least 10 per week within two weeks. To acccomplish this, they reduced the overlap in staffing and changed the schedules of two technologists, increasing their ability to see more patients.
The new staffing schedule, which didn’t infringe on union contracts, came out of a brainstorming session and was supported by staff and physicians.
After the first two technologists adjusted their schedules, a third technologist, seeing the difference it made, offered to adjust his schedule. By the end of one week, about 15 more patients were added to KP’s schedule and not referred to outside services. This resulted in a cost savings of about $7,500 per week, or about $30,000 per month.
"One of the big advantages that we have found is that we have openings for certain appointment types within a day or two, not a week or two," says labor co-lead Heather Thompson.
In addition to the work done in the UBT, a mobile scanner was added to the department. This enabled an additional 11 patients per day to be seen—or about 55 patients per week—for an additional per week savings of $30,000 in outside referral costs.
"There is a downside to that, though,” Thompson says. “Since patients are able to get the appointment so quickly, it seems as though we have a lot more short-notice cancellations and we do not have a wait list to fill them with. That is something that we will need to monitor and try to come up with a solution to."
Sunnyside Medical Center's MRI department was receiving more cases each day than it could handle.