Northern California

Richard Abrenilla

Tracy Silveria
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Status
Developing

I used to be in a department that was driven by management—it was ‘my way or the highway.’ There was no enthusiasm in the workforce, nobody smiled, nobody cared. A pay cut and a couple months later, I transferred to the Emergency department. There I was introduced to the UBT and never looked back. Our meetings are held as ‘equals’ alongside some of the most empathetic managers and supervisors, and we are trusting each other to do by what's right by the department and not by the individual.

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Tedros Tecle

Meet Tedros Tecle, one of the Humans of Partnership. This radiologic technologist tells the story of how getting injured gave him the courage to speak up at work.

Tracy Silveria
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Status
Developing

I was using a mobile X-ray machine in a patient’s room....I had the machine and the tube set up, then I positioned the patient—and when I moved, I forgot about where the tube was. I hit my head on it. It hurt quite a bit, but I wasn’t injured. I was too embarrassed to tell anyone. I didn’t say anything and sure enough another tech did the same thing....After my colleague was injured, I spoke out at my department meeting. Now we position the patient first, and we don’t move the tube until we are ready to take the picture.

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Lending a Hand to Financial Assistance Forms
  • Standardizing note-taking styles across the team
  • Assigning a financial counselor to each in-need patient
  • Working with Admitting Department to identify patients who need assistance and provide counseling

What can your team do to reduce unneeded variation? And what can your team do to work with other teams to improve service? 

scarrpm Thu, 12/29/2016 - 12:05
Choosing to Work Positively
  • Placing a Gratitude Jar in the entrance of the department (a prominent position)
  • “Planting” a Gratitude Tree on a wall
  • Buying playful fruit-shaped sticky notes to write their gratitude messages and post on the tree 

What can your team do to measure and reduce stress? 

Laureen Lazarovici Wed, 12/28/2016 - 14:01
A Little Communication Goes a Long Way
  • Communicating with the team
  • Asking how the team prefers to communicate or meet
  • Allowing team members to earn rewards for attendance

What can your team do to improve communication among its members? 

 

scarrpm Tue, 12/13/2016 - 17:34

Five-Minute Fix Sharpens Team Focus

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Wed, 12/07/2016 - 13:49
Topics
Hank
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sty_Hank49_five minute fix
Long Teaser

Visual boards have made unit-based teams at Gilroy Medical Offices more focused, productive and comfortable sharing ideas. That in turn helps teams deliver better, more affordable care.

Communicator (reporters)
Tracy Silveria
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Sherry Crosby
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Five-Minute Fix Sharpens Team Focus
Deck
Visual boards show team members what they need to know
Story body part 1

Wondering how to keep your meetings short and to the point? Stop by Gilroy Medical Offices in Northern California and watch a unit-based team power through its five-minute daily huddle.

On a Tuesday in October, the Family Medicine UBT for Station 1 gathers around a magnetic marker board filled with visual reminders and messages. Medical assistant and SEIU-UHW member Nabi Lopez takes her turn leading team members through the day’s staffing and scheduling assignments, a discussion of where they stand on key clinical goals and upcoming department events.

Exactly five minutes after they gather, a buzzer sounds, and the 10 nurses, physicians, clerks, pharmacists, EVS staff and others head off to start their day.

A new routine

Crisp meetings and high team engagement were not always the norm for the department.

“Prior to using visual boards, our meetings were few and far between,” says SEIU-UHW member Dawn Reyes-Takaki, a medical assistant and member of the original project team. “They were chaotic, filled with complaints and negativity. Staff felt that changes were forced on them with no input.”

Three years ago, a San Jose-based team studied performance improvement techniques in other organizations. One of the ideas that stood out was the use of visual boards. A larger group of managers, workers and improvement advisors agreed on necessary adjustments and a standard format for the boards, and selected Gilroy Medical Offices to test their use.

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