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Shaping the Workplace of Tomorrow

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Thu, 04/16/2015 - 16:38
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Equipping frontline workers with the skills and knowledge for tomorrow’s jobs—an essential element in preserving Kaiser Permanente’s competitive edge—is the focus of the Work of the Future subgroup at National Bargaining.

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For the main article, I'd like to change Hal's quote to make it more connected to the bargaining and why WTF is a bargaining subgroup:
“We have a huge new influx of members because of the Affordable Care Act. We have to meet their needs differently – and we can do that through our contract that we're bargaining this spring."
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Members of the Work of the Future subgroup at the March kickoff for 2015 National Bargaining in Southern California.
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Flexibility at Work

KP employees are already demonstrating the flexibility and resourcefulness needed to adapt swiftly and successfully to the changes coming to health care. See what ideas you can adapt for yourself and your team:

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Major topic at national bargaining is how to prepare frontline workers for the dramatic changes coming to health care
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Equipping frontline workers with the skills and knowledge for tomorrow’s jobs—an essential element in preserving Kaiser Permanente’s competitive edge—is the focus of the Work of the Future subgroup at National Bargaining.

The negotiations this year focus on three topics, in addition to wages and benefits:

  • Workforce planning
  • Training and development
  • Innovation and technology

“Health care is changing,” says Hal Ruddick, the executive director of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions. “We have a huge new influx of members because of the Affordable Care Act. We have to meet their needs differently—and we can do that through the solutions we create bargaining in partnership.”

Planning for change

Flexibility, foresight and planning are essential to developing a workforce that is ready for coming changes in the health care industry, said Zeth Ajemian, the director of Workforce Planning and Development for Southern California and Hawaii.

“To prepare our workforce for the future, we need to align staffing with current care delivery transformation, innovation and new technologies that meet the evolving needs of our members,” he says. “We're entering a tremendous era of change. A portion or all of an employee's work will change and their skills, training and experience will need to change to fit that job.”

Creating career pathways that allow current KP employees to move into new roles is essential, says Brian Lockhart, security lead at Sunnyside Medical Center in the Northwest and a member of ILWU Local 28.

“We want some flexibility around the experience component,” says Lockhart, who explained that employees who have trained for new roles are sometimes unable to move into them because they don’t have the necessary work experience.

Role of technology

Leveraging technology to meet the emerging needs of our patients will be another key issue for the bargaining team, says Dennis Dabney, senior vice president of Labor Relations and the Labor Management Partnership.

“We need to decide how we bring that new technology into our work environment,” he says. “We need to react more to what our patients want, rather than what we want to give them.”

Whatever innovations are designed and implemented in the future, frontline workers need to be engaged from the start, say union partners.

“Kaiser Permanente is on that bullet train toward the future and if the labor movement is not on that train, we are going to be left behind,” says Janis Thorn, interim president of United Steelworkers Local 7600.

Work of the Future is one of three subgroups tasked with crafting the next National Agreement. The other two are Total Health and Workplace Safety, and Operational and Service Excellence in Partnership.

Visit bargaining2015.org for more information, videos and slideshows, and to sign up for bargaining updates.

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HANK Winter 2013

Format: PDF

Size: 16 pages; print on on 8½” x 11” paper (for full-size, print on 11" x 14" and trim to 9.5" x 11.5")

Intended audience:  Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used: Download the PDF, or read the stories online.

HANK Fall 2012

Format: PDF

Size: 16 pages; print on on 8½” x 11” paper (for full-size, print on 11" x 14" and trim to 9.5" x 11.5")

Intended audience: Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used: Download the PDF or read all of the stories by clicking the links below.

Cover story: The Sponsorship Dilemma 

tyra.l.ferlatte Mon, 01/28/2013 - 10:06

Hank Summer 2012

Format: PDF

Size: 16 pages; print on on 8½” x 11” paper (for full-size, print on 11" x 14" and trim to 9.5" x 11.5")

Intended audience:  Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used: Download the PDF or read all of the stories online by using the links below.  

Flying the Talk

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Thu, 05/10/2012 - 05:53
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This story ftells of two Colorado RNs who, on a flight home from the Mid-Atlantic States, end up aiding a sick passenger, an experience that strengthens their faith in the power of partnership.

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Colorado's Becky Sassaman left,
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The power of partnership in the air
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The patient at the center of the Value Compass isn’t always a KP member, as two Colorado RNs proved on a flight home from the Mid-Atlantic States region last fall—and the experience they shared in the air also brought a fresh appreciation of their shared values and commitment to partnership.

Debbie Zuege, Colorado’s senior director of Nursing and Women’s Health, and Becky Sassaman, a nurse at the Arapahoe After-Hours clinic in Denver, work together as co-leads for the Nursing Partnership Council but had never teamed up clinically. That changed on their return flight from the Mid-Atlantic States, where they had talked about partnership with a group of union stewards.

Shortly after takeoff, Zuege was settling in and starting to read a magazine when something caught her eye.

“A flight attendant came down the aisle, holding an oxygen tank,” Zuege said. She alerted Sassaman, and they joined the flight attendant, who was tending to a woman lying down in the aisle. The woman was pale, sweating excessively and seemed confused. She’d been sick to her stomach. Two physicians on the flight joined in to help move her to the back of the plane.

The hastily formed team concluded the woman was dehydrated. Her pulse was weak. They elevated her feet and gave her liquids to drink; Sassaman placed an IV into her hand to administer fluids they found in the onboard medical kit, and Zuege administered oxygen. The woman responded well, with her pulse and color returning to normal. The doctors and nurses decided she’d be fine for the duration of the flight, and the attendant rearranged passengers so Sassaman could sit with her. The team kept the IV in place, suspending the fluids from a hanger hooked to the overhead bin, and gave her medicine for her nausea. Zuege and the two physicians checked in throughout the flight.

“The lady was so incredibly sweet and grateful,” says Sassaman, who helped her get clean, found her jacket and even lent her a pair of workout pants. “She kept saying ‘Thank you’ and ‘How can you do this?...I made a scene.’ I told her we are nurses, and it is what we do.”

 

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LMP Wins Praise From Harvard Business Review

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Thu, 07/07/2011 - 13:53
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A lead article in the current edition of the Harvard Business Review says collaboration is key to successful 21st century enterprise and our Labor Management Partnership is a great example. The article also highlights the efforts by KP's Irvine Medical Center to streamline surgery costs.

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LMP wins praise from the Harvard Business Review
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Article highlights Irvine Medical Center's successful efforts to reduce surgery turnaround times
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The July/August 2011 issue of the Harvard Business Review highlights Kaiser Permanente’s as a model collaborative community that fosters innovation, agility and efficiency. In the issue’s lead article, "Building a Collaborative Enterprise," the authors make the case that KP is among the leading organizations that are reaping rewards from operating as collective communities that "encourage people to continually apply their unique talents to group projects — and to become motivated by a collective mission."

The authors of "Building a Collaborative Enterprise" identify four organizational efforts that are keys to developing a collaborative community:

  • Defining and building a shared purpose
  • Cultivating an ethic of contribution
  • Developing processes that enable people to work together in flexible but disciplined projects
  • Creating an infrastructure in which collaboration is valued and rewarded

A shared purose

The authors use the KP Value Compass to illustrate their point about the importance of defining and building a shared purpose. The Value Compass features the patient/member at the center of the compass with four surrounding points: best quality, best service, most affordable and best place to work. It is included in the 2010 national agreement between KP and the 29 local unions that make up the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions and informs work at every level of the organization. As the authors explain, the Value Compass "guides efforts at all levels of Kaiser: from top management’s business strategy, to joint planning by the company's unique labor-management partnership, right down to unit based teams' work on process improvement.

"We must recognize that old ways of doing things will not work in the new world of health care or business in general," says John August, executive director of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions. "At the KP Labor Management Partnership, we have devoted ourselves to transform our relationships throughout the organization, to collaborate and to learn in the interest of service to our patients, members and our communities. We are on the right path, and it’s fantastic that the Harvard Business Review has recognized our success."

Improving quality, reducing costs

The article also recognizes the accomplishments of a team at KP’s Irvine Medical Center that applied a collaborative approach — dubbed the Total Joint Dance — to reduce the turnaround time between total joint replacement surgeries. By involving nurses, surgeons, technicians and other employees in coming up with solutions, the team was able to devise changes that reduced the average turnaround time between procedures from 45 to 20 minutes, freeing up 188 hours of operating-room time a year at an average annual savings of $132,000 per OR.

The practices have since been adopted by general surgery, along with head and neck, urology, vascular and other specialties at Irvine, the article notes, and the approach has spread to other KP hospitals.

Collaboration as strategy

"This is a great example of how we’ve been able to use a collaborative approach to harness the knowledge of frontline employees, and then spread the effective practices that we develop with that knowledge," says Barb Grimm, senior vice president of the Office of Labor Management Partnership.

The authors conclude that the organizations that will become the household names of the future will be those with a strong collaborative culture. "Few would argue that today’s market imperative — to innovate fast enough to keep up with the competition and with customer needs while simultaneously improving cost and efficiency — can be met without the active engagement of employees in different functions and at multiple levels of responsibility. To undertake that endeavor, businesses need a lot more than minimal cooperation and mere compliance. They need everyone’s ideas on how to do things better and more cheaply. They need true collaboration."

This story was originally published on InsideKP

 

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Negotiating in Partnership: A Case Study

Submitted by Kristi on Sun, 06/20/2010 - 19:06
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Negotiating in Partnership: A Case Study

This report analyzes the 2005 labor negotiations and the resulting five-year contract.

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Negotiating in Partnership: A Case Study

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107 pages

Intended audience:
Managers; UBT consultants, co-leads and sponsors

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This report analyzes the 2005 labor negotiations and the resulting five-year contract.

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LMP Logo (color gif)

Submitted by Kristi on Sun, 06/13/2010 - 17:56
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LMP Logo - Color (gif)

Labor Management Partnership logo in color; gif format. Use for web, PowerPoint and simple animations. Can be saved with transparent background.

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LMP Logo (color gif)

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GIF, color

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This small file format uses the minimum amount of information possible. Use it for web and multimedia such as PowerPoint presentations. The .gif format provides the option of saving with transparent background. You can also use it for simple animations on the web.

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LMP Logo (black jpg)

Submitted by Kristi on Sun, 06/13/2010 - 17:56
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LMP Logo (black jpeg)

Labor Management Partnership logo in black; jpg format. Use for web, email and PowerPoint.

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LMP Logo (black jpg)

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JPG, one-color (black)

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This compressed .jpg file requires less memory than .eps or .tif file types. Use for web and email applications and for multimedia such as PowerPoint presentations.

 

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