Best Place to Work

Peer Advice: Fear, Technology and Reality

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Wed, 04/02/2014 - 16:35
Region
Request Number
sty_hank39_sherylmiller
Long Teaser

Sheryl Miller, a licensed practical nurse and member of SEIU Local 49, discusses the challenge of integrating electronics into our everyday work. From the Spring 2014 Hank.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Sheryl Miller, technology coordinator
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What Will the Future Bring?

Read more about the how LMP and KP are planning for the future.

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Technology is changing frontline jobs
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Sheryl Miller, a licensed practical nurse and a member of SEIU Local 49, is the technology coordinator for the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions for the Northwest region. She’s worked for Kaiser Permanente for 30 years and has been involved in most of the major electronic changes of our time—including implementation of KP HealthConnect®—and has helped the organization with the challenge of integrating electronics into our everyday work. She was interviewed by LMP Communications Consultant Jennifer Gladwell.

Q. What did you learn working on KP HealthConnect?

A. I look at the people component of technology. If people are paralyzed with fear, they’ll never use the technology. With KP HealthConnect, we learned that peer-to-peer training, sponsor support and funding for labor flex teams—which have the people who do the job become subject matter experts—was a model for success.

In the 1980s, you did not learn typing as part of your schooling as a nurse. When we implemented KP HealthConnect, we had significant generational gaps. Some employees didn’t type. Through the labor flex teams, we ensured peers were training each other around work they understood.

Technology impacts workforce planning. We have to think ahead so we don’t become extinct. Roles will change, but through the partnership and workforce planning, we can plan for the changes and redeploy impacted staff.

Q. How is technology affecting roles today?

A. Self-check-in kiosks are rolling out in the Northwest clinics. This is what some of our patient population has been asking for. Registration representatives are a group of dedicated employees that have been doing customer service behind a desk. Now, they are being asked to be a concierge, a greeter, as well as answer complex benefit questions.

The Visual Dermatology Assist project is being piloted at two clinics in the Northwest. Medical assistants are being trained, following the provider’s order, to take a picture of a skin irregularity on an iPhone and send it to Dermatology. Sixty-eight percent of the photos were reviewed, diagnosed and had treatment plans within 24 hours. A typical appointment could take six to eight weeks to schedule. This is improving access.

Q. Have you been able to spread effective practices from the KP HealthConnect implementation?

A. ICD-10, the new coding system, goes live in October. We’ve been able to engage UBTs and labor so they are part of making the decisions and determining processes. We’re using peer-to-peer training and trying to break down barriers early on so our staff and members have the best possible outcome.

Q. All this technology is great, but what about privacy and security?

A. It keeps me up at night. I have spoken to steward councils about privacy. We are seeing an increase in social media violations that could result in people losing their jobs or being fined. We have to be very careful about what we’re posting in social media. It’s so easy to vent about a bad day, but you have to be vigilant to ensure you are not revealing patient information. I am here for the patient and to educate employees on privacy and security.

Q. You’re a chief steward, yet you seem adamantly in favor of management policy. How do you explain that?

A. I work off of fact. It’s a policy that we do not go into our own medical record or those of others unless we have a business need to do so. I am a union member, but I will never lose sight that I am here for the company, patient and union, and we all have to work together to be successful.

Q. After so many projects—what’s the secret to success?

A. I work with great people, locally and nationally. I’m not a technology expert, but if you remember the people behind the technology, it works really well. If I can help someone in care delivery enhance their ability to take care of our patients, then I’ve done my job. Technology and people are not going away—so we have to be willing to advance with it.

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Peer Advice: One Lesson at a Time

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Wed, 04/02/2014 - 16:33
Request Number
sty_HANK39_austin_hudnallLVN
Long Teaser

Marcella Austin,an employee at the Ontario Medical Center, works her way up from medical assistant to LVN with a little help from her employer, her college and her community.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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I uploaded the Word doc to Requests with my changes in red: a) quote and title of Kathy D; b) deleting "so far" and c) deleting extra space in front of Valerie's name
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Marcella Austin, an LVN and member of United Steelworkers Local 7600, is the union co-lead of the Surgical Services UBT at Ontario Medical Center.
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Additional resources

Career advancement programs for most Union Coalition-represented members:benhudnallmemorialtrust.org.

Career advancement programs for SEIU-represented employees: www.seiu-uhweduc.org/

Chaffey College:www.chaffey.edu

San Bernardino County Workforce Investment Board:cms.sbcounty.gov/wib

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Get Help in Moving Up

Career development and advancement is a hallmark of Kaiser Permanente.

Here are some ideas to help yours move along.

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Working up from Medical Assistant to LVN
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Marcella Austin spent her first six years at Kaiser Permanente as a medical assistant. Three years ago, she became a licensed vocational nurse through a partnership between KP, the Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust, Chaffey College and the San Bernardino County Workforce Investment Board that funded a Pathway to LVN project. That gave her the support she needed to advance her career—tuition, books, tutoring and wages. She was one of the first of nearly 50 KP employees to graduate. She was interviewed by LMP Senior Communications Consultant Anjetta McQueen.

Q. What started you on your journey?

A. My father, who is diabetic, had a heart attack when I was in college. My mom and I were the first ones at the ER with him. It was scary, but I remember those nurses and how they took care of him and us. One of the nurses took an orange from her lunch and taught me how to do an insulin injection. I fell in love with nursing. Six months later, I became a medical assistant. I thought that was as close as I would get.

Q. How did you manage school after years of working?

A. I went to school full time and worked in Urgent Care from 5 to 9, getting my 20 hours a week. The Ben Hudnall trust covered the other 20 hours. I never lost a paycheck. It’s not like I could say I didn’t have the funds—the funds were there.

Q. What about the responsibilities at home?

A. I have two kids, a 16-year-old daughter and a son who is 13. I had a husband, mother and mother-in-law all helping me out. I used to be the one who cooked, cleaned and picked up after everyone. All of this helped my kids become more responsible.

Q. College nursing slots are hard to come by. How did Chaffey College help?

A. I have taken one course or another since graduation from high school. I also took time to get married, have children. Chaffey pulled all of my transcripts from everywhere and offered the prerequisite classes I still needed.

Q. Your wages and tuition were covered, but how did you manage all those other costs?

A. We owe a lot of thanks to the county’s Workforce Investment Board. They saw a need for educating people in the community. We didn’t have to worry about transportation, uniforms or supplies during our clinicals. All of that can really add up.

Q. How did the cooperation of your labor management partners help you?

A. Managers and labor leads stayed with us every step of the way. They had meetings with us. They kept asking us how they could help. If there was a barrier, if a schedule needed changing, they would work together to see that it got done. I especially appreciate the help from Susan Rainey, the department administrator for staffing at Ontario; career counselor Michele DeRosa with the Hudnall trust; Margaret Winningham, a senior Human Resources consultant for Fontana/Ontario; and Valerie Robinson, a Local 7600 representative.

Q. What is different about your work now?

A. In the LVN training, you get the basics—biology, anatomy, psychology—but you also learn about nursing care plans, sterile processing, wound care and get hands-on training all while attending school. I can assist RNs in several procedures, do minor surgical assists, order and co-sign documents in KP HealthConnect®.

Q. What is different about you?

A. My confidence has gone through the roof. I was selected to go to the KP Quality Conference, and I was invited to speak in a leadership meeting about my experience. The girls on the unit tease me now, saying they want my autograph.

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Working Her Way Up

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Tue, 12/03/2013 - 12:26
Request Number
sty_MAS_WFPD_Donna Fraser
Long Teaser

Trying to get an education while working full-time is not easy, even for someone as ambitious as Donna Fraser. That’s why the LMP’s Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust was created, to bring value and support for lifelong learning to union coalition-represented employees.

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Donna Fraser, RN, has worked her way up the career ladder, with four promotions in 21 years.
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RN builds her skills, and career, with a little help from her partners
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When Donna Fraser sees something that needs doing, “I like to get it done,” she says. Twenty-one years ago, she joined Kaiser Permanente as a clinical assistant, one of the first in the Mid-Atlantic States region in the urgent care setting. After a few years, Fraser led a couple of her colleagues in approaching their supervisor at the Camp Springs, Md., facility about moving beyond registration and clerical duties to assisting nurses with patients’ health care needs.

“I said, ‘We believe you can utilize us.’ I knew I could do so much more to help out when the nurses were busy.”

She found a training program that ran from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. five days a week. Meanwhile, she worked 3 p.m. to midnight shifts, mainly on weekends, and completed her courses in about three months. After struggling mostly on her own to pay for certifications in performing EKGs, phlebotomy and other tests and specimen collections, Fraser joined the facility’s fledgling class of urgent care technicians.

Hard work, good support

Today she is the lead RN at the Urgent Care/Clinical Decision units at the Largo Medical Center Hub, one of the newest facilities in the region. Fraser, a member of UFCW Local 400, says she owes much of her success to one of the Labor Management Partnership’s scholarship and wage replacement programs.

“I grew up here,” says Fraser. “It’s a great company if you work hard. You have to show up to win, do the best job.”

Trying to get an education while working full time is not easy, even for someone as motivated as Donna Fraser. That’s why LMP’s Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust was created, to support lifelong learning for union coalition-represented employees.

Wage replacement allowed her to take time off from her regular work schedule to attend classes, continue her employment, and keep up her clinical skills and knowledge. She’s taken advantage of the program twice since her first promotion, becoming an LPN in 2009, an RN in 2011. Fraser became a lead RN in 2013.

Taking ownership

Jennifer Walker, the Mid-Atlantic States region improvement specialist who works with Fraser’s unit-based team, has seen greater benefit to the training. “Donna has become the person who organizes her group, serves as a support to all and keeps the team motivated,” Walker says. "And she has done this while working a full-time job and raising a family.”

But Fraser credits the Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust program with giving her a sense of ownership and responsibility for her education and her career. “We did the scheduling,” she says. “The big difference was the empowerment our manager gave us. As long as we could find the backfill, we went to our classes.”

The keys, says Fraser, are a supportive supervisor who “believes in the partnership” and a willingness to look to the union as a positive force: “Sometimes when you are an employee, you think you just use unions for when you are in trouble.”

The greatest challenge is helping people see that if they are involved in the process, it will be easier to move up.

“You can always find places within KP that need your expertise,” she says.

 Tips from a frontline career strategist

Donna Fraser has steadily climbed the career ladder during her 21 years at KP. She offers five tips for others who want to stay on top of their game:

  1. Communicate with your manager about your career advancement interests.
  2. Set your goals—don’t expect that things will to come to you.
  3. Have a support team. We all need encouragement when taking on a difficult challenge.  
  4. Expect light at the end of the tunnel: Remember why you are making the effort.
  5. Inform yourself. Information about career advancement programs for most Union Coalition members is available at bhmt.org

Career advancement programs for SEIU-represented employees are available at the SEIU UHW-West & Joint Employer Education Fund.

 

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Employment and Income Security Clarification

Submitted by Julie on Thu, 10/10/2013 - 15:07
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tool_EISA_clarification

To prevent misunderstandings, a group of union coalition and KP representatives issued a clarification of the Employment and Income Security Agreement in September 2013. This document is not a renegotiation or modification of the agreement, but simply a clarification.

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goes in highlight box on this page: http://www.lmpartnership.org/what-is-partnership/national-agreements/employment-and-income-security-agreement
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Employment and Income Security Clarification

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Members of Partnership unions; KP managers

Best used:
Help your colleagues understand the application of the Employment and Income Security Agreement. 

 

 

 

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Issue Resolution and Corrective Action User Guide

Submitted by Julie on Thu, 09/05/2013 - 15:34
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tool_Issue Resolution_Corrective Action

This guide is designed to help managers and union members jointly solve workplace problems and deal with employee performance concerns.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
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Issue Resolution and Corrective Action User Guide

Format:
PDF

Size:
110 pages

Intended audience:
Managers, union members and stewards

Best used:
This guide provides an overview of two critical LMP issue resolution processes that are used to address workplace issues at the front line.  It includes examples of completed issue resolution tracking forms, which are used at the end of the process. Also, it explains the philosophy behind the process to create a lasting foundation for change. Read it cover to cover, or use it as a reference document.

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10 Essential Tips for 'Greening' Your Work Life

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Mon, 01/07/2013 - 18:29
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Content Section
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tips_for_supply_waste_reduction

This poster offers tips for "greening" your work life.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
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10 Essential Tips for 'Greening' your Work Environment

Format: 
PDF

Size: 
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
Frontline employees, managers and physicians, and UBT consultants

Best used:
Use this tipsheet as a starting point for team discussions and brainstorming over ways to make your workplace more environmentally friendly. Post on bulletin boards and discuss in team meetings, too.  

Related stories/videos:
See how teams have put these tips to use:

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Poster: Help Teams Grow

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Fri, 09/28/2012 - 10:56
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bb_help_your_teams_grow

This poster features a checklist UBT co-leads and sponsors may use to help teams develop.

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Poster: Help Teams Grow

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Unit-based teams and UBT sponsors

Best used:
Set your team up with these 10 tips and point them down the road to success.

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bulletin board packet
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Certificate of Appreciation—Version 1

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 15:58
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Running Your Team
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tool_certificates of Appreciation version 1

Download and customize this certificate of appreciation for individuals or teams to recognize their teamwork and achievements, and build morale and momentum.

Laureen Lazarovici
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Certificates of appreciation

Format:
Word document (color and black and white)

Size:
One 8.5" x 11" page

Intended audience:
UBT co-leads and sponsors

Best used:
Customize this certificate to reward and recognize individuals and teams who've improved performance. Celebrating and recognizing achievement builds morale and inspires your team.

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Powerpoint: Busy Call Center Boosts Morale With Fun

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Fri, 04/27/2012 - 14:36
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Content Section
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ppt_busy_call_center_moral_md

This PowerPoint slide highlights a call center team that improved employee morale with fun, healthy diversions.

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Poster: Busy call center boosts morale with fun

Format:
PPT

Size:
1 Slide

Intended audience:
LMP staff, UBT consultants, improvement advisers

Best used:
This PowerPoint slide highlights a call center team that improved employee morale with fun, healthy diversions. Use in presentations to show some of the methods used and the measurable results being achieved by unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente.

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Poster: Busy Call Center Boosts Morale With Fun

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Fri, 04/27/2012 - 14:20
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Content Section
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bb_busy_call_center_moral_md

This poster highlights a call center team that improved employee morale with fun, healthy diversions.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Busy Call Center Boosts Morale With Fun

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
How can this poster help you and your team find fun ways to boost morale?

 

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