Frontline Managers

Embracing Change Helps Team Save Thousands of Dollars

  • Reviewing the Emergency Department’s patient intake procedure and documenting the number of forms used
  • Brainstorming ways to reduce multiple forms and frequency of contact between clerks and patients
  • Educating clerks and staff on the new technology, including the use of electronic signature pads

What can your team do to leverage technology to save money and improve the patient experience? What else could you do to help keep KP affordable for our member and patients?

 

How Managers Can Support Career Development

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Wed, 11/22/2017 - 12:04
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ED-1255
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Kaiser Permanente and the Labor Management Partnership provide many resources to advance the skills and careers of frontline workers. Here's five ways frontline managers can take advantage of them, and get results.

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Alec Rosenberg​
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Take Action to Skill Up Your Team

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5 tips to strengthen your team — and the organization
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One of a manager’s most important roles may not appear on the job description — but goes hand in hand with getting results.

“Managers have a key role in helping employees build successful careers,” says Maria Aldana, a career counselor with the SEIU UHW-West & Joint Employer Education Fund, one of two education trusts supported by the Labor Management Partnership between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions. “A great leader creates other leaders.”

Fortunately, Kaiser Permanente managers have many ways to support their employees’ development and ensure their department’s success. Here are five.

1. Have career conversations with employees. Talks can be brief and happen anytime and anywhere during the work day, not just during annual performance evaluations. Get tips at Kaiser Permanente’s leadership and management portal (sign-in required) and at Skillsoft @ KP (sign-in required), an on-demand, mobile-ready catalog of learning resources.

“We need to keep and grow our people so they are ready for the changes in health care,” says Beth Levin, a career counselor and outreach coordinator with the Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust, which serves all members of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions outside of SEIU UHW.

2. Know what resources are available. HRconnect and KP Learn have resources available for all KP employees, and the LMP website offers tips, tools and practices for individual and team development. Employees can learn about the four critical skills, explore career paths and access tuition reimbursement at kpcareerplanning.org.

The two education trusts offer courses at every level of development, many at no cost to employees, as well as career counseling, tuition assistance programs and more.

3. Work with career counselors. Education trust career counselors can tailor training, provide one-on-one career planning and coaching, and help with skill assessments.

For example, an indexing clerk manager in Colorado told Aldana how his employees needed more computer skills to keep doing their jobs effectively. She met with employees, discussed changes in their field, informed them of available resources and developed a plan that included onsite training.

4. Schedule time for employees to take classes. “Labor and management can come up with a schedule that works and we can offer the training,” Aldana says. “We usually can find vendors that come on site.”

5. Look for development opportunities for employees. Managers can suggest that an employee lead a huddle, serve on a committee, or become an active unit-based team participant or health and safety champion to “gain experience, build skills and network,” Levin says.

Building such engagement can get employees excited about change and encourage them to build their skills.

“When one person is successful, it inspires and motivates other people,” says Levin.

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Health and Safety Champions—January 2018 Focus Paul Cohen Tue, 11/21/2017 - 16:19
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UBT health and safety champions

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Follow these steps to lead a safety walk-around in your department.

ED-1259

No one knows the ins and outs--and the potential hazards--of the workplace better than the people who do the work. A simple safety walk-around can help identify and report those risks.

Tracy Silveria
Non-LMP
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Puzzles and Games Answers Laureen Lazarovici Mon, 11/20/2017 - 17:13
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hank
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Frontline employees, managers and physicians

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Find out the answers to the puzzles and games in the last 12 issues of Hank. There is one page for each issue, so scroll down to the one you want. 

ED-1187

Get the answers to the puzzles and games that ran in the last 12 Hank issues.

Beverly White
Tyra Ferlatte
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Boost Your Team's Performance

Submitted by Sherry.D.Crosby on Mon, 11/20/2017 - 10:12
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ED-1219

Encourage your team to be high performing and career-resilient with help from the Labor Management Partnership’s education trusts.

Sherry Crosby
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Frontline managers

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Use this guide to understand the services available to your staff and foster employee educational and career development.

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Six Ways to Keep Your Skills Sharp

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 11/16/2017 - 16:47
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ED-1258
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Take four national leaders and practioners of workforce development trends and strategies. Add 200 Kaiser Permanente managers and union representatives committed to keeping KP and its workforce strong and resilient. Get the results: Six strategies for building the workforce of the future.

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Alec Rosenberg​
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Learn More About Skills for the Future
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Kaiser Permanente, union members prepare for the workforce of the future
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Looking to stay current in the fast-changing world of health care? You’re not alone.

Kaiser Permanente leaders, labor representatives and industry experts offered insights at November’s Workforce of the Future Conference in Berkeley, California.

“We’ve made a lot of progress over the last few years,” said Monica Morris, director of National Workforce Planning and Development, who welcomed the audience of 200 labor and management representatives tasked with advancing the Labor Management Partnership’s Workforce of the Future initiative. “Now it’s time to do even more.”

Here are six strategies you can follow to prepare for the workforce of the future.

Learn new ways to work. During the Industrial Revolution, cobblers and weavers had to adapt or get left behind. This process continues today—only now, it’s happening faster, said keynote speaker Art Bilger, founder and CEO of WorkingNation, a nonprofit group seeking solutions for economic change.

“The solutions are local,” he said. “Communication of these issues and solutions is critical.”

Become lifelong learners. Skills used to last a lifetime and career paths were clear. Now there’s a new development every 18 months. Get on the cutting edge and imagine the opportunities technology provides.

“Be deeply curious. We’re all newbies,” said keynote speaker John Seely Brown, an author, scholar and former director of the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, who gives high marks to the innovative learning approach of the new Kaiser Permanente School of Medicine.

Keep developing your career. Age is not a barrier to lifelong learning, said keynote speaker Sandi Vito, executive director of 1199SEIU Training and Employment Funds, which partners with Montefiore Health System in New York.

“People tend to think that employees in their 50s can’t aspire to career advancement,” Vito said. “It just requires different approaches. Adults learn more by doing.”

Indeed, the average age of participants in the two LMP-supported educational trusts (Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust and SEIU UHW-West & Joint Employer Education Fund) is 44.

Use available resources. Kaiser Permanente employees have many resources to advance their careers, including targeted training programs for workers represented by the Coalition of KP Unions.

To start, learn four critical skills that will be essential to the future of health care. A digital fluency program launched in October, to be followed by programs in consumer focus, collaboration and process improvement.

“We don’t know what the jobs of the future will be,” said conference facilitator Tony Borba, Northern California regional director for The Permanente Medical Group. “We need to use our resources so we are ready for changes in the workforce.”

Tap the power of partnership. As Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of KP Unions have successfully partnered, Montefiore and 1199SEIU have developed collaborative training programs, such as community health worker apprenticeships that benefit employees, the organization and the community, said keynote speaker Lynn Richmond, Montefiore’s chief strategy officer.

Get involved. The conference produced actionable ideas such as developing a communications strategy to show the value of continuous learning and generate more on-the-job training. Other ideas included apprenticeships and reverse mentoring.

“How do we leverage the power of preceptors, mentors and the educational trusts?” said conference speaker Jessica Butz, the union coalition’s national program coordinator for Workforce Planning and Development. “This is your chance to help shape what we do at Kaiser Permanente.”

 

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Better Coordination Spells R-e-l-i-e-f for Telemetry Team

  • Reviewing the department budget and using performance improvement tools to determine the causes of overtime
  • Revamping the department workflow and coordinating with each other to schedule a relief RN to cover those on break
  • Educating and reminding staff about the importance of clocking in and out on time
  • Encouraging nurses to notify their managers two hours before the end of shift if they expect to work overtime.

Kathy Chavez

ED-1215

Meet Kathy Chavez, one of the Humans of Partnership.

Sherry Crosby
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Labor Management Partnership 20th Anniversary Logo

I’ve been with Kaiser Permanente for 18 years. I came in as a medical assistant and eventually became the scheduling coordinator for open heart surgery. When you start out, you’re shy and you’re scared. But when you work with managers who say, “It’s OK to speak up,” you learn to be comfortable speaking up. Matthew Graeser was my manager. He encouraged me to go back to school. I was 49 years old at the time. I got my bachelor’s degree in health care administration and my grandkids watched me cross the stage. When I manage others, I always encourage them to speak up. If they’re not comfortable doing something, I tell them it’s OK to speak up and ask for help. They can ask me anything and we work it out together.

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