Southern California
Agility was key for this pediatric team as they took to the street to provide recommended immunizations for preventable diseases, including measles and whooping cough, for their younger patients.
Without well-child visits, many young patients are not receiving recommended immunizations for preventable diseases, including measles and whooping cough. The Fontana Pediatrics team brainstormed and developed a drive-up vaccine clinic.
Remembering Kathy Sackman
Pioneering leader of UNAC/UHCP passed away December 31.
Workers, managers and physicians team up and leverage Partnership principles and methods to combat COVID-19.
As we move toward the “next normal,” the Labor Management Partnership has played a key part in supporting COVID-19 vaccinations.
Frontline workers, doctors and managers have come together to get shots in arms. These fruitful collaborations point the way forward as Kaiser Permanente and the Partnership unions work to transform fear into confidence, confusion into clarity, and hesitancy into bold action.
Look at the data
A joint effort between SEIU-UHW and physicians pushed vaccination rates of the union’s members from less than 50% all the way up to 64% within 3 months. It began when union leaders crunched the numbers — and didn’t like what they saw.
At the beginning of February, less than half of SEIU-UHW members at Kaiser Permanente were vaccinated against COVID-19. For instance, only 40% of union employees were vaccinated in the Emergency Department at Downey Medical Center in Southern California, where Gabriel Montoya works as an emergency medical technician.
Montoya and his fellow union members — working with physicians and managers — wanted to raise those rates, so they pulled together labor-doctor huddles. Union members were scared, confused and hesitant.
Building trust
At first, they considered joint physician-labor rounding. But they realized being in patient areas wouldn’t support those conversations, so they pivoted to huddles — short, informal team meetings.
Carol Ishimatsu, MD, a pediatrician with the Southern California Permanente Medical Group, was one of the first doctors to join a huddle in Downey.
“Vaccines are our most important intervention,” says Dr. Ishimatsu, who participated in the clinical trials for the shots when they were being tested.
To build trust, Dr. Ishimatsu emphasized her shared experience with SEIU-UHW members as warriors on the front line. “I told the employees: I do the same thing you do after work,” she says, describing her ritual of removing her clothes in the garage and putting them directly in the washing machine before entering the house. “We are in different professions, doing the same thing.”
Joel Valenciano, an Environmental Services manager at Downey, helped organize huddles at outlying clinics.
“I encouraged the staff to be honest, relate their fears and doubts, anything holding them back,” he says. “And they really opened up.”
“We did it in partnership,” says Montoya, the emergency medical technician. “The labor partners led the huddles and introduced the doctors.
I can’t imagine that happening in a nonunion hospital, or even a non-Partnership hospital.”
Here are 3 ways to build confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines and increase vaccinations:
- Download this tip sheet to replicate the labor- doctor huddle strategy
- Download this flier to share the latest information about vaccines with unit-based teams
- Download this comprehensive toolkit to help organizations build vaccine confidence among their members and the public
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Brian Zeringue
Brian Zeringue, one of the Humans of Partnership.
I am not a stranger to being put in harm’s way. I am a combat veteran. I served in Somalia. Now that I’m a nurse, I know there are hidden threats, like bacteria and viruses. Kaiser Permanente pioneered the way for me to be vaccinated, so I was motivated out of gratitude. If I am being my best, I can help my patients be their best. You have to be courageous and brave as a health care worker.
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Raul Aguilar
Meet Raul Aguilar, one of the Humans of Partnership.
When I was asked if I wanted the COVID-19 vaccine, I didn’t hesitate. I got the shot because I needed to protect my family. I live with my mother and my grandmother, who is 96. Since the pandemic hit, I haven’t hugged or kissed my grandmother. Even though all of us will soon be vaccinated, we’re still going to wear our masks. It’s a little bit of insurance that’s going to protect us in the long run.
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