The Road Taken
Key accomplishments in workforce planning and development, workplace safety, total health, joint marketing and growth and attendance (and a peek into the future).
What can your team do to increase use of kp.org?
Key accomplishments in workforce planning and development, workplace safety, total health, joint marketing and growth and attendance (and a peek into the future).
What can your team do to welcome new members to KP?
What can your team do to encourage patients and members to sign up on kp.org?
What can your team do to welcome new members? And what could your team do to leverage its members' unique strengths and knowledge?
When people join Kaiser Permanente, good things happen. Kaiser Permanente and our unions gain strength and stability. Good jobs become more available and secure. More people in our communities benefit from KP’s affordable, quality care. That’s why the Labor Management Partnership helps spread the word on KP’s better model of care.
Henrietta, Hank's resident columnists, explains both the selfish and not-so-selfish reasons for being an ambassador for KP, at work and away from work. From the Summer 2014 issue.
Today, maybe, you have a headache. Or your back hurts. Or you’ve come down with a case of the grumps and merely want to show up, do what you have to do, and roll on home at the appointed hour.
But you don’t.
Why? I suspect because in your heart of hearts, you know that every day, each of us is an ambassador for Kaiser Permanente—at work and away from work, too. And it’s important we represent the organization well.
On one level, this is self-serving: It helps ensure KP has a vibrant future and we continue to have the best jobs in health care.
On another level, it’s pretty cosmic. Given how big and well-known Kaiser Permanente has become, it’s easy to forget that our approach to health care upends U.S. norms. But as we succeed in delivering our brand of health care in this market, others take notice—and begin to adopt our methods. We have the power to revolutionize health care delivery for the benefit of everyone.
So it’s important that KP stay around, and we can do that only if we “grow membership”—by keeping the members we have and attracting new ones.
This issue of Hank explores how the Labor Management Partnership is helping to reach out and bring more members into the KP fold. It lays out how, at every level and layer of the organization, partnership motivates and enables people to step outside their traditional roles to act in ways that benefit us all.
Regardless of our particular job, we each have a part to play, every day, grumps or no grumps, in the work of helping Kaiser Permanente grow bigger and stronger. That means you. And that means me.
Kaiser Permanente has a unique competitive advantage when it comes to attracting and retaining members—its union partners, working with KP sales and marketing teams, to tell our story.
“I was almost devastated,” says Karen Cardosa, a grocery clerk in Albany, Oregon, “when UFCW told us they were no longer offering Kaiser Permanente as an insurance option.”
Cardosa and her family had been KP members for years through the union’s Local 555 Employers Health Trust. That changed when a variety of issues resulted in KP losing the account, which covered many Local 555 members. The union continued to represent nearly 2,000 Kaiser Permanente pharmacy and radiology employees, who—as KP staff members—continued to have KP health care.
But today, Kaiser Permanente is again an option for up to 15,000 UFCW members and dependents in the Northwest region who are covered by the health trust.
An affordable price, high quality, a new hospital, expanded clinics and a new billing system helped win back this account. But something else was also at play.
Thanks to the Labor Management Partnership, the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions and Kaiser Permanente take a joint approach to winning and keeping health plan members that is almost unheard of elsewhere in this country.
Bringing together union members and KP sales and marketing teams, the campaign helped win, expand, win back or retain 33 accounts covering 125,000 KP members in 2014, with a focus on public-sector accounts.
The effort spans almost every level of the organization and the unions.
Leaders of the local and international unions that belong to the union coalition play an active role in advocating for KP as the preferred health care provider when negotiating contracts or benefit programs with employers.
In addition, some 45 frontline union ambassadors spoke to 25,000 KP members and potential members at outside union and community events in 2014. “I have enjoyed working side by side with the sales and marketing representatives to promote Kaiser Permanente,” says Sera Jordan, a medical assistant, union ambassador and SEIU Local 49 member in the Northwest. “It has enabled me to share my firsthand knowledge of Kaiser Permanente and the care we provide.”
And unit-based teams, by giving frontline workers a voice in improving quality, service and affordability, are a big selling point for union purchasers of care. UBTs launched more than 8,000 performance improvement projects last year at every point on the KP Value Compass, including thousands of affordability projects that saved, on average, more than $40,000 per project.
“Working with our union partners, we’ve been able to come to the table with customer solutions that meet everybody’s needs—including the unions that aren’t part of KP, who have tremendous influence in purchase decisions,” says Kate Kessler, a Member Sales and Service Administration director. “We are unique in having a strong labor partnership in our own business, and we can speak that language.”
Find out why record membership matters to our current and future members on InsideKP.
Call centers across Kaiser Permanente band together across time zones to improve customer service, spread successful practices. From the Spring 2015 Hank.
It's not just a job for sales team members anymore: See what all Kaiser Permanente workers can do to help others become KP members.