south san francisco

Allergy Team Helps Screen for Cancer

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Wed, 02/05/2014 - 15:46
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sty_ssf_ncal_allergy_screening
Long Teaser

Even though hay fever is their specialty, the members of this South San Francisco allergy team helped ensure their patients were up to date on their cancer screenings using simple laminated cards and a script.

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Non-LMP
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Tyra Ferlatte
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we don't have photos of this team, so I'm attaching a generic one. --CB
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Alva Marie Aguilera, Alva.Marie.Aguilera@kp.org

 

 

 

650-742-7180

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Help Improve Screening Rates

There are times you have to get creative to better serve your patients.

Browse through these ideas and see if one or more can work for your team.

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South San Francisco department takes extra steps to ensure patients are as healthy as can be
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South San Francisco allergy team’s specialty may be allergens and hay fever, but that didn’t prevent it from helping to improve patients’ screening rates for cancer, too.

It didn’t happen all at once—some staff members were skeptical at first. Scheduling a screening appointment for a wheezing patient didn’t seem right.

“At first people would say things like, ‘You know, I really don’t feel comfortable saying to a patient, “Oh, you’re due for mammography” when they’re sneezing and congested and here for allergies,’” says Alva Marie Aguilera, the department’s supervisor and management co-lead for the unit-based team.

Screenings as strategy

But part of delivering on Kaiser Permanente’s Total Health promise is to identify health risks and signs of disease as early as possible. Regular screenings for such diseases as high blood pressure, diabetes, and colorectal, cervical and breast cancers are an important part of our strategy.

That means caregivers and employees in seemingly unrelated departments—not just those in, say, internal medicine—have a role to play, and KP HealthConnect® provides them with a powerful tool.

Any time a patient is seen, a “proactive office encounter” message pops up in the member’s electronic record if he or she is due for a health screening or if important health data needs to be updated. It doesn’t matter what the reason is for the current visit or which department the patient is being seen in. 

The members of South San Francisco allergy department took the important work of taking the next step to heart: Following up on the prompt and offering to schedule the patient for the screening or asking the necessary questions to fill in missing information.

Scripts and reminders

To help make sure those things happened consistently, the team tried some small tests of change:

  • It created a general script to help broach the questions with patients and posted laminated cards on computers to serve as reminders.
  • Aguilera reports the weekly screening numbers so staff members know how they are doing and where they missed opportunities to follow through on the HealthConnect® prompts.

The small changes had a big impact. Before the team started the project in February 2012, it followed through on the prompts 80 percent of the time. In the first two months of the project, that jumped to 90 percent. By early 2013, the prompts were being followed up on 95 percent of the time and held steady at that rate for the rest of the year.

It wasn’t just staff members who were uncertain of the practice in the early days.

“At first it was kind of surprising to patients,” says medical assistant Lidia Vanegas-Casino, a member of SEIU UHW and the UBT’s union co-lead. “So we had to explain to them: ‘It’s a way to help you, and to keep up with the things you need done. It’s a proactive approach to keeping you healthy.’”

Positive example

It was one of KP’s own commercials that convinced team members of their important role in keeping patients healthy. Aguilera showed the ad that features KP member Mary Gonzalez, who had gone in—fittingly—for an allergy appointment when the receptionist noticed she was due for a mammogram and booked an appointment for her. The screening picked up a mass, and Gonzalez subsequently learned she had breast cancer. The early detection helped ensure a positive result.

It wasn’t a primary care or OB-GYN department that got her that screening. It was allergy.

“It really hit home for people,” Aguilera says. “If it wasn’t for the allergy receptionist who took that time, we don’t know what would have happened. That was a big encouragement.”

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Sick Days Are Not Days Off

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 07/06/2011 - 12:48
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Sick Days Are Not Day's Off
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Team explains attendance policy, boosts morale
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Employees calling in sick was having a negative impact at the radiology lab.

Those serving the South San Francisco Medical Center and Daly City Medical Office Building had to work harder to fill in gaps.

Morale was sinking. And tired employees were vulnerable to getting sick, creating a downward attendance spiral.

Recognizing a crisis, the UBT issued an anonymous attendance survey and found there was widespread confusion about sick leave.

Wanting to encourage teamwork in improving attendance and to boost department morale, team members agreed to create department-wide goals, a department-wide educational effort, and a group celebration.

But the true aim was clear—help all staff members make their goals and encourage them to attend the party. They also wanted employees to have a clear understanding of expectations.

In setting the new targets in the attendance guidelines, the team defined clear goals. By announcing the guidelines at a staff party, it also set an upbeat tone, says labor co-lead Donna Haynes.

The new targets included:

  • no more than one tardy per two-week pay period (a tardy is three minutes past start time)
  • no more than two sick leave absences per quarter; and
  • no more than two 'danglers' (forgetting to clock in or out) per pay periods.

Supervisors met with each employee to review his or her attendance trends and to discuss concerns or needs. The staff found the meetings supportive.

"They asked, 'What can we do to help?’ They were trying to encourage you," says labor co-lead and lead mammography technologist, SEIU UHW, Adie Hoppis.

Employees who met the guidelines were invited to a quarterly lunch—complete with white tablecloths, silverware, wine glasses (for nonalcoholic beverages), music and catered food. Managers served the staff members.

"We're there to celebrate the staff," says Tracey Fung, service unit manager. "They were really floored. There had never been anything like this before in the department."

Hoppis says the lunches are a powerful positive reinforcement.

"They’re really nice. You’re treated special.”

With more employees at work, patient waiting time has decreased.

"Employees are happier, and patients are, too," Hoppis says.

Request Number
pdsa_SSF_Radiology_Attendance
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Long Teaser

Once sick leave guidelines were clarified, the South San Francisco Radiology department fixed its attendance issues.

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Non-LMP
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needs photo, tlf, 7/18
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Adie Hoppis, Adie.Hoppis@kp.org
Donna Haynes, Donna.Haynes@kp.org

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