Southern California

Why Partnership Is Good for Managers

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 10/17/2014 - 10:59
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sty_Bernie Nadel_peer advice
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A top manager explains how working in partnership makes his job easier.

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Laureen Lazarovici
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Bernie Nadel says "partnership is a dance...and management has to take the first step."
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Bernie Nadel, Bernie.I.Nadel@kp.org, 626-381-4015

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Why Partnership Is Good for Managers
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Working together produces a wealth of problem-solving wisdom, but is not optional
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Bernie Nadel is director of customer service and call center operations at Patient Financial Services in Southern California. He co-chairs the Regional Operations LMP Council, bringing together 27 business units, including the regional laboratory, central refill pharmacy and optical services.   

None of us was born into a unit-based team. Partnership is learned. Teams and their leaders need guidance and a playbook.

I tell other managers partnership makes my job easier. I have 10 other people helping to come up with solutions. I know some managers are uncomfortable with that approach. They act as though they can opt out of the Labor Management Partnership. It’s as if they said, “I know we have KP HealthConnect™, but I want to use this other computer program.” I say, if you don’t want the LMP, don’t work at Kaiser Permanente. You don’t get to opt out of the company’s policy.

Owning the work

Recently, our UBT went through a list of issues to work on. Call volume is up 30 percent, and we’re figuring out how to deal with that. We are going to do several tests of change. UBT members are gung ho about it. If I were to try to make those changes myself, I’d miss things. I would not get the insights of the people who interact with our members every day. And the people doing the work wouldn’t have the ownership and energy that comes with having a voice. Employees know I believe in partnership—and I give them the time to do it. That is a challenge. But you can’t solve the problems if you don’t invest.  

Not that long ago this call center was a toxic environment. There was low trust and low morale. All that has switched 180 degrees. A big step was my predecessor attending a sponsorship training class, which led her to involving UBTs more in day-to-day operations. I wanted to build on that.  

Taking the first step

LMP is a dance between labor and management, and management has to take the first step. When labor sees that management is serious, that’s when it changes. We’ve shown that you can change the culture.

Recently, we had a meeting with top executives about improving the consumer financial experience. Our UBT representative group prepared a report, and it gave our executives insights they couldn’t get any other way. It was not slick, it was real. I’m grateful to the group for the experience, commitment and knowledge they bring to this work every day.

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Making the Point About Needle Safety

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 10/17/2014 - 10:51
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sty_needle safety_San Diego
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Injuries from needle sticks fell dramatically after a group of nurses ensured their peers had the right supplies and peer training. Now there's a nurse voice on the committee that buys needles for KP.

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Laureen Lazarovici
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RNs Jessica Heffern, Leanne Vitacco, Brittni Demers and Lucas Pepin (not pictured) led the drive for needle safety
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Brittni Demers, Brittni.B.Demers@kp.org, 619-528-5820

 

 

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Making the Point About Needle Safety
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A team of nurses seeks out a safety solution
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Do you doubt you can lead changes that make Kaiser Permanente a better—and safer—place to give and get care?

A small group of nurses at the San Diego Medical Center showed that leading change is, in fact, part of their job.

Brittni Demers, RN, and three of her colleagues spearheaded a successful effort to reduce needlestick injuries, and now their expertise is being tapped throughout Kaiser Permanente to bring the voice of frontline workers to safety initiatives.

Demers, a member of UNAC/UHCP, is on KP’s National Sharps Safety Committee. It is one of the many sourcing and standards teams that advises KP on everything the organization buys—and it is the only one with union representation. As such, it gives the caregivers who actually use needles, scalpels and other sharps a way to influence purchasing decisions. It also impacts workplace safety and tools workers use every day.

From July to December 2013, a huge remodeling project at the hospital shut down two medical-surgical units, leaving several nurses temporarily without anywhere to work. Demers and RNs Jessica Heffern, Leanne Vitacco and Lucas Pepin got together to tackle a problem that had been concerning them: needle and sharps injuries. By July 2014, the team’s project had led to an astounding 76 percent decrease in needlestick injuries in inpatient nursing units. There were similar improvements for all sharps injuries throughout the San Diego service area.

Here’s what the team did:

Peer-to-peer training

Only two years out of nursing school, Demers quickly saw that “real life” didn’t always comport with what she had learned in her classes. “You go to school, you learn correct techniques, then you go into a hospital and it’s different,” she says. “People like doing things their way.” The team devised a quick refresher for nurses, by nurses, that emphasized what the evidence and research said about safe needle handling. The nurses traveled from unit to unit in the hospital, and to some outlying clinics, to make their case. “When you emphasize safety—our own and the patients’—and provide the supplies, then people will do it,” she says.

“The peer-to-peer approach was effective because the team understood the nurses’ day-to-day concerns,” says Mark Trask, the director of environmental health and safety in San Diego. “There is empathy and understanding, which allows for more dialogue.” In addition, because the trainers were registered nurses, they could spell other nurses for the 10-minute refresher. More than 700 nurses, physicians and lab techs took the training.

Standardize supplies

While demonstrating safe needles to other units, the team members often would hear, “Oh, we don’t have that one.” So they got to work standardizing the needles throughout the medical center. “We went through every single medication room,” says Demers. “They became supply chain experts,” says Trask. By adjusting the types and amounts of equipment, they also reduced waste and saved money.

Share expertise

These nurses now participate in incident investigations when there is a needlestick injury, which is an important part of the region’s workplace safety program. Plans are in the works to spread the training to primary care departments in the ambulatory setting.

Identify resources

Demers’ participation on the National Sharps Safety Committee extended her reach system-wide. The committee field tests safety sharps in every KP region to identify products that most effectively prevent injuries. Based on user feedback, the committee selects the highest-rated safety sharps as KP’s national standard.

Why did the four frontline nurses step up? For Demers, the answer is easy: “You have to be focused on safety when you have a needle in your hand.”

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Giving Patients a Voice

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 10/03/2014 - 18:38
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Hank
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sty_giving patients voice
Long Teaser

Unit-based teams bring the voice of frontline workers, managers and physicians to improving health care at Kaiser Permanente. Some UBTs go one step further and include the patient voice. Find out how they do it.

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Laureen Lazarovici
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Teo's stay in the NICU after he was born led dad Trav Ichinose to become an active member of the team's parent advisory council, contributing his voice to improving performance.
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Giving Patients a Voice
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How UBTs are listening to members
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On her last day at work before going on maternity leave, something started going wrong with Juanita Ichinose’s pregnancy—and she found herself in an ambulance, on her way to the Downey Medical Center. Her husband, Trav, followed in his car. The images from an ultrasound foretold a grim story: Juanita was expecting twins, but one of the boys was not moving. “Code Pink” began blaring from the overhead speakers as she was wheeled to the operating room. What caregivers and the family feared came to pass. One twin survived, but the other did not.

“We had some moments with our other son,” says Trav Ichinose. “Then I went to see Teo. He weighed a pound and a half. The doctor told me, ‘He is very small.’”

Thus began Teo Ichinose’s four-month stay in the neonatal intensive care unit, a journey that led his father to become an active member of the department’s parent advisory council. Today, Teo is a happy 4-year-old, obsessed with his toy airplane from the latest Disney movie. And his father continues to bring the voice of the patient to Downey’s NICU unit-based team, where his input has helped shape numerous improvements.

UBTs exist to include all voices—employees, managers and physicians—in efforts to improve performance. And some UBTs are bringing in one more crucial voice: the patient’s.

To be sure, there are UBT members who resist. Objections range from “we don’t have time” to “patients can’t possibly know how our department runs.” But for others, it is a step that literally brings the patient-and-member focus of the Value Compass to life.

“UBTs have a lot of expertise. They know what is and isn’t working,” says Hannah King, director for service quality for unit-based teams. “What is missing is the perspective of the user, someone who might be afraid or in pain. We don’t know what they go through before and after they come to us. So we need to ask.”

Read on to see how UBTs have included patients and members in their work and improved performance.

Whose handoff is this, anyhow?
Downey NICU finds a way to keep parents involved during shift changes

During his son’s four-month stay in the NICU, Trav Ichinose became concerned that parents were prevented from visiting during shift changes, when the Nurse Knowledge Exchange Plus occurs.

“Parents want to maximize their time with their babies, and the policy was undermining that,” he says.

Nurses wanted to integrate parents into the process but also needed to prevent interruptions. “During the report, the parents tended to interject,” says Marnie Morales, RN, the team’s union co-lead and a UNAC/UHCP member. “That was a safety issue,” because it is important nurses not get sidetracked.

So, together with Ichinose and the parent advisory council, UBT members devised a system that met the needs of caregivers and parents. There would be “quiet time,” when parents listen and jot down notes while the outgoing nurse updates the incoming nurse. Once they’re done, it’s the parents’ turn to discuss their baby’s care with the nurses.

In testing the process, the nurses realized they needed to be able to discuss sensitive information out of the parents’ earshot—if, for example, there was a domestic violence situation or mental health problems in the family. So they came up with a discreet cue that signals the need to step away.

“The patient is getting better care because there is better communication. Information that wasn’t getting shared before is now,” Morales says. “As nurses, we get so involved with charting that we forget the patient is sitting there. Now, we are explaining as we are doing it because the parent is there watching.”

The change gave the team a boost in its satisfaction scores, which rose from 74 percent in the third quarter of 2012 to 88 percent one year later. It works to maintain the scores by holding refresher trainings with staff.

“With long stays like ours, your emotional resilience is tested to the max,” Ichinose says. “There are things that happen in the NICU setting that can undermine that resilience—or bolster it. Bolstering our ability to take in information, to be physically and emotionally present for the care of our child, affects our satisfaction with the care.”

Preserving pride, preventing falls:
A comment provides a San Diego team with fresh insight

Why do patients fall when they are in the hospital? Is it because they are elderly? Or under the influence of medications that affect their balance? The leaders, physicians and nurses at the San Diego Medical Center considered a range of possibilities and tried everything in the usual playbook, posting pictures of falling leaves on patient doors and using color-coded armbands to indicate fall risk. But nothing was working.

Then the UBT on the 5 West medical-surgical unit cared for a patient who was a member of the facility’s patient advisory council—and they asked his wife for her opinion. She said her husband—normally a self-sufficient, strong man—was too embarrassed to call a nurse to help him to the bathroom, especially given that he was wearing a flimsy, possibly revealing hospital gown.

That “aha” moment led the UBT to take a new approach: No one walks alone. Instead of trying to figure out who is at risk for falling, caregivers would treat everyone as a fall risk and provide assistance. The pilot program was so successful that it is being spread to the entire hospital. Before the campaign began in November 2012, the hospital had been averaging 16 falls a month. In June 2014, that figure was 3.4 a month.

Seeing the experience through the patient’s eyes was the key to the solution.

“I felt as if I was part of the team, and my input was just as valuable as any other member’s,” says Pat, the patient’s wife (last name withheld at her request). “If you go to patients with the attitude that they will be helping you do your job better, you will get an honest evaluation of what can be done to help, and they can make your job easier and more rewarding.”

Reluctant to change?
Some ideas for including patients as part of a UBT

Sheryl Almendrez, the management co-lead of the Definitive Observation Unit (also called a step-down unit) at the San Diego Medical Center, acknowledges that caregivers on her team were hesitant to have a patient join its improvement work: “They were interested, but were they ready to hear ‘the real truth’?” And what if a chronic complainer ate up valuable time?

As it turns out, there was little to fear. Patients’ requests were reasonable. For example, they want nurses to give them a heads-up when using an ear thermometer. “We’re used to it,” says Almendrez, but they may not know what it is. “They may think it’s an injection coming at them.”

For the Urgent Care unit in Largo, Md., listening to patients’ feedback about long wait times when coming in with a sore throat led that UBT to work with colleagues in the lab to fast-track tests for strep throat.

“Our team was very hesitant about bringing a member in because there could be more complaints than real feedback,” says Donna Fraser, RN, the team’s union co-lead and a member of UFCW Local 400. Making it clear why it was including patients helped: “We told the patient that we want to know what we are doing wrong, because how else will we improve?”

Morales of the Downey NICU says she no longer flinches from criticism, whether or not it’s phrased “constructively.”

 “Some of the people we have on our advisory council are the ones who complained the most,” she says. “You know what? They became the advocates for all the other babies. They helped us change a lot of things on our unit for the better.”

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How to Climb the Path to High Performance

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Mon, 09/08/2014 - 16:47
Request Number
_sty_road to high performance.pc
Long Teaser

Unit-based teams that reach the top levels of the Path to Performance get better results for KP members, patients--and workers. This team reveals how they got to high performance and stay there.

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Tyra Ferlatte
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Members of the Perioperative team at Ontario Medical Center say performance improvement keeps them sharp.
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Effective Team Practices

Successively proceeding along the Path to Performance is truly a team effort. But how do you get everyone involved?

Use these tips and tools from high-performing teams and reach Level 5.

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How to Climb the Path to High Performance
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Helping workers, KP, members and patients
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Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions set an ambitious goal in the 2012 National Agreement: to have 75 percent of all unit-based teams achieve high performance by year-end 2014—for good reason. As teams develop, they deliver better, more affordable care and a better work experience.

There’s work to be done. More than 60 percent of teams in Georgia, Hawaii and the Northwest are meeting the goal, but overall, just 52 percent of KP’s 3,500 UBTs program-wide were rated high performing as of June 30.

The good news is that nearly 1,800 teams across KP have hit their mark, built performance improvement into their everyday work, and are showing other teams how to do the same.

Modeling the way

The Perioperative UBT at Ontario Medical Center in Southern California is one of those teams.

“It’s about having everyone involved and engaged,” says Michelle Tolentino, RN, one of the Perioperative UBT’s union co-leads and a member of UNAC/UHCP. “We attended UBT training together, got results on our first project (safely reducing patient stay times) and kept rolling.”

The 11-member representative team, which covers more than 60 nurses, surgical techs, medical assistants and others, reached Level 5 on the five-point Path to Performance soon after forming in 2012. Like many other teams in the region, it saw its rating drop in 2013 after a labor dispute led union members to suspend their UBT involvement. When the issue was resolved, the team regrouped and quickly regained its Level 5 rating.

The secret sauce

The team does a few key things right that helped it achieve and now maintain its high performance. Those can be modeled by other teams aspiring to Levels 4 and 5 status:

  • Performance improvement tools: “Using our performance improvement tools—process mappings; run charts; plan, do, study, act cycles—keeps us all sharp,” says Mary Rodriguez, assistant clinical director and UBT co-lead. “That’s been key for us: understand the process and use the tools.”
  • Constant tests of change: The Perioperative team now has seven active tests of change, most focusing on improving affordability and workflow efficiency. “Our projects often build off of other projects,” says Rodriquez. For instance, a recently completed project helped reduce turnaround time in the OR from 28 minutes to 20 minutes in three months. In a parallel project, the number of patients receiving medication at least 30 minutes before surgery—the ideal time for most patients—increased from 70 percent to 85 percent. Such projects draw on the whole team’s skills and perspectives, she says.
  • Physician involvement: Shawn Winnick, MD, an anesthesiologist, assistant clinical director and UBT member, points to another key to success: “Physician presence on a (clinical) UBT is extremely important,” he says. “It brings a different perspective to projects.”

Calling UBTs “the single most powerful vehicle we have at KP to empower employees and lead change,” he notes that physician leaders at the medical center have supported UBT development and helped overcome barriers.

“Staff and physicians need to have the time to consistently make it to UBT meetings,” he says. “Even if it means bringing in someone to cover part of a shift, that is more than paid back by the cost savings and organizational benefits that come out of UBTs.”

The benefits accrue to the workforce as well as patients.

“We have a say in our work process,” says Robert Kapadia, a certified registered nurse anesthetist and member of KPNAA. “I come to the table as an equal partner and advocate for others on the team, and for our patients. Our UBT is a way to solve problems and move forward, not just complain.”

Dr. Winnick adds: “There’s not a single member of our team who hasn’t contributed an idea or helped make us better. That’s a measure of a performance. We all have different skills and perspectives, and we bring all of that to our team.”

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Poster: Going Green

Submitted by Beverly White on Thu, 08/28/2014 - 13:12
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bb2014_Going_Green

This poster, which appears in the September/October 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, promotes a video about a Kaiser Permanente environmental services team that is putting to work the green training they received in a Workforce Planning and Development Training program.

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Poster: Going Green

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Inform your UBT members about this EVS team that found it's easy to go green—and lower operating costs, improve patient and workplace safety, and increase employee satisfaction.

See the video here.

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Safety on a Silver Platter

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 08/19/2014 - 16:31
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sty_WPS_WestLA
Long Teaser

Task standardization and a crystal-clear message from top leadership is reducing injuries at one Southern California medical center.

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Laureen Lazarovici
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Standardizing tasks—such as passing sharp instruments in the operating room--is creating a safer workplace at West Los Angeles Medical Center.
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Tracy Fietz, Tracy.L.Fietz@kp.org, 323-857-2218

Nor Jemjemian, Norair.Z.Jemjemian@kp.org, 323-857-2201

Lisa Duff, Lisa.X.Duff@kp.org, 323-857-4433

 

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More on Workplace Safety

Creating a safer workplace is essential to good care for your patients. It also provides the right environment for clinical, clerical and support staff, and for members.

There are plenty of rescources to help. Here are a few ideas to help you create a safer workplace.

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By standardizing common tasks, and having regular updates, you can help to reduce workplace injuries
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Want a safer workplace served up on a silver platter?

Then stop by the operating room at Kaiser Permanente’s West Los Angeles Medical Center in Southern California. Surgeons and the other health care workers there pass sharp instruments to one another on silver trays—rather than passing them hand to hand—which reduced injuries related to handling sharp instruments during procedures by 34 percent between September 2013 and May 2014.

“We can see the results,” says Lisa Duff, a surgical tech and workplace safety champion at the facility. This success is part of a new emphasis at the facility on task standardization—analyzing each step of an activity, identifying the potentially hazardous steps, coming up with a safer way of doing things and then ensuring everyone follows the new process the same way, every time.

How to reduce risk

“Injuries occur when there is not consistency,” says Tracy Fietz, chief administrative officer for Southern California Permanente Medical Group at West L.A.  “If you break [a task] apart on a fishbone diagram, you can identify where the risks are. It is about removing variation.”  

Standardizing practices also has helped several departments reduce—and in some cases eliminate—sharps-related injuries for up to 17 consecutive months. It’s also helped reduce injuries to EVS workers by 75 percent when they clean floors.

Another practice that is improving safety at West L.A. Medical Center is regular monthly meetings between senior leaders,  including Fietz, and the labor and management safety leaders of targeted departments. Departments that have special line-of-sight safety goals (see below) in the region’s Performance Sharing Program get special attention. The gatherings are a space to analyze processes, see what’s working—and what isn’t—and collect information to share with others.

How partnership helps

“I work with managers and the workplace safety champions, because it’s a partnership,” says Nor Jemjemian, the chief administrative officer for Kaiser Permanente Hospital/Health Plan at West L.A., who also leads those meetings. “I want the employees doing the tasks to be part of the solutions.”

Union-represented employees, for their part, appreciate the crystal-clear message top leadership is sending.

“You need management to back you up when you speak up,” says Duff, a member of SEIU-UHW. “Employees know that our managers will back them up 200 percent.”

Open communication, trust and partnership processes are the foundation of a safer workplace, says Jemjemian.

“When I was an employee, there were [hazardous] tasks I did that my manager didn’t know about,” he says. Today, in contrast, “UBTs create a venue and a forum to discuss the everyday work.”  

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Driver as Receptionist? Why Not?

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 08/12/2014 - 11:04
Request Number
sty_mobilehealthvehicle_kern
Long Teaser

Union and management leaders in Kern County break through traditional positions to pioneer innovative health care delivery models and prepare for jobs of the future.

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Laureen Lazarovici
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Driver Alfredo Alvarez rigs up the mobile health vehicle as the sun rises over Bakersfield. He'll drive it 40 miles to Tehachapi and spend the rest of the day checking in patients.
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Preparing for Jobs of the Future

Health care is changing, and you have to figure out how to continue to provide your patients with great care. Working through the problem is always a good step.

Here are some resources to give you some ideas and to help navigate those changes.

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Kern County union and management leaders work out innovative solution
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Hundreds of Kaiser Permanente health plan members live in the rural communities of Kern County. Faced with driving yawning distances through winding, sometimes snow-covered mountain passes, many find it daunting to come to clinics for medical care. So in March 2012, KP leaders in the service area started to bring care to these members via a mobile health vehicle.

Great idea, right? But first, they had to figure out the details. How many providers and staff members could fit in the van? Who was going to do which tasks? Could medical office assistants collect co-payments and schedule appointments? Or would they be too tied up giving shots, checking HealthConnect for care gaps and performing other duties? And what would the van drivers do when they weren’t driving?

Rewriting the playbook

The old-fashioned playbook would call for the union to insist that KP hire a receptionist for the van and for the employer to exercise its prerogative to do whatever it wanted. But the Labor Management Partnership is strong in Kern County, so union and KP leaders worked out a solution that transforms care delivery and provides a model for how jobs of the future can be flexible, innovative and satisfying. On Kern’s two mobile health vans, the drivers take on reception tasks, such as collecting co-payments and booking appointments.

“I love member service,” says driver Alfredo Alvarez, a UFCW Local 770 member. “We are in contact with doctors, nurses and members.” He and fellow driver Javier Gonzalez spent several weeks receiving additional training in clinics and a call center. “I am getting paid, so why not stay busy and learn new things?” says Alvarez. Today, the clinic on wheels provides more than 500 doctor and nurse visits a month.

Keeping up with change

Holly Davenport, a UFCW Local 770 union representative who helped negotiate the innovative work agreement, says she sometimes hears resistance from union activists who wonder if this type of arrangement will lead to job losses. “We have to keep up with the way health care is changing,” says Davenport. “We did this in partnership. I heard what management had to say, they heard what I had to say, and we worked it out.” 

Davenport gives credit for the successful solution to her strong, trust-based relationship with Candace Kielty, an assistant medical group administrator in Kern. Says Kielty: “My role as a manager is to paint the big picture. We want to serve an underserved population, and we want to meet people where they are.”

However, Kielty says creative problem solving cannot rely solely on individual relationships, but must be built into the structure and culture of Kaiser Permanente through the Labor Management Partnership.  

“When I hire department administrators, in the orientation and mentoring, I talk about developing trust,” says Kielty. “It's an expectation.”

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Going Green

Request Number
video_VID-41_GoingGreen
Long Teaser

At Kaiser Permanente's Los Angeles Medical Center, 350 environmental services workers are putting the green training they received through ant educational trust to work. The result: Lower operating costs, improved patient and workplace safety and happier employees.

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Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust can now be found online at: bhmt.org (instead of benhudnallmem...etc).
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VID-41_GoingGreen/VID-41_GoingGreen.zip
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Date of publication

Kaiser Permanente and two Workforce Planning and Development trusts are training frontline workers in green practices. At Los Angeles Medical Center, 350 Environmental Services workers represented by SEIU-UHW are putting that training to work. The result: lower operating costs, improved workplace safety and happier employees. 

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