Right Setting, Lower Costs, Better Care
How one behavioral health team improves care and helps save $1 million by educating patients about Emergency Department use.
How one behavioral health team improves care and helps save $1 million by educating patients about Emergency Department use.
Format:
PDF (color or black and white)
Size:
11" x 17"
Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians
Best used:
This tabloid-size infographic shows us where the money goes. You may also be interested in our business literacy glossary.
Use this infographic to learn about where the money is spent.
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians
Best used:
When you need to mix it up in a meeting, work on this word scramble to test your performance improvement savvy.
Use this word scramble in your UBT meeting to test your team's performance improvement savvy.
Format:
PDF (color or black and white)
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Anyone with a sense of humor
Best used:
Our comic superhero shows that our values all add up to our value.
Our comic superhero shows how every part of what you do adds value.
Need to spread the word fast? Download one of five flier templates, fill in your text, print out and you're done! These are Word templates, so no fancy software (or design skills!) are needed.
As these short stories make clear, your voice makes a difference. It's not always easy, but for union members, managers and care providers, speaking up is a right and a responsibility.
Meet Bernie Nadel, one of the Humans of Partnership. "Having a UBT that works well makes my job so much easier," he says.
We have a representative group here, eight people from labor and two managers. We had a conversation about this backlog. Now that our call volume is not as crazy as it was, we have to do a burn-down plan to get that inventory down. Our representative group went off and figured everything out. Having a UBT that works well makes my job so much easier. It’s a great thing—not just because they have a plan to work down the inventory, but because we’re responding to members who have some kind of question with their billing.
Meet David A. Harper, one of the Humans of Partnership. He recalls the time a friend committed suicide and reflects on the importance of speaking up.
A friend of mine committed suicide a week and a half ago. We all thought things were OK, even though we knew they weren’t perfect. We had no idea things were as bad as they were. This wasn’t a Kaiser colleague or member but—at home, at work, you never know when what you say might make the crucial difference. Could I have asked more questions? It may not have changed the outcome, but at least I would have spoken up.
Meet Jessica Weidner, RN, one of the Humans of Partnership. " I see my staff a little like my patients," says the nurse manager. "I want them to be happy."
I loved taking care of patients when I was a hospice nurse, and I see my staff a little like my patients. I want them to be happy. If there’s a problem, we work through it together. For example, the nurses in Internal Medicine were being inundated with messages. They felt overwhelmed. We went through the in-basket together and decided to do what’s called ‘one-piece flow.’ That means you do today’s work today. Not every day is sunshine and rainbows but one of my nurses recently emailed me to say the new workflow is ‘invigorating.’ I’m doing a good job when the team is empowered.
Format:
PDF (color or black and white)
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Faciliators and others involved in leading the issue resolution process.
Best used:
Use these tips when you are having hard conversations during the issue resolution process.
When the going gets tough during the issue resolution process, the tough need these tips about how to move things forward and preserve working relationships.