Poster: Improving Mammogram Rates
This poster, which appears in the January/February 2013 Bulletin Board Packet, highlights a Maryland team that improved its mammogram screening rate.
Meaningful goals and first-rate teamwork help a pediatrics team in Georgia succeed in getting adolescent girls in for a series of three shots over six months. From the Winter 2014 issue of Hank.
On one level, the pediatric clinic at Georgia’s Panola Medical Center Offices is like any other pediatric clinic. Babies squawking and squealing are part of the soundtrack—and under that, there’s the murmur of parents and nurses cooing to get the little ones to stop crying.
But the Panola clinic’s unit-based team stands out. Its members work at one of the several pediatric clinics in KP’s Georgia region that have significantly improved preventive care and screenings for their young patients, who range in age from newborn up through their teens.
The pediatric teams have achieved these goals in the midst of competing demands by staying laser-focused on a handful of quality measures in the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set, or HEDIS.
“Our projects are usually HEDIS-related,” says Panola’s labor co-lead, Sheryl Boyd, a licensed practical nurse and member of UFCW Local 1996. “HEDIS is so measurable.”
The work is a good example of how, instead of driving an agenda from the top down, achieving a goal can be inspired by engaging frontline teams in understanding how they contribute to KP’s brand promise of total health.
“The teams are not ‘being told what to do,’ but rather they see the big picture and see what they can do to affect it,” says David Jones, MD, Georgia’s physician co-lead for UBTs. Dr. Jones says he and his labor and management LMP counterparts stay abreast of Georgia’s regional goals and priorities, then work with UBT consultants to communicate those to frontline teams.
“We incorporate UBTs as a lever to execute our clinical goals,” says Dr. Jones, creating a vital loop of communication and support.
One of the Panola UBT’s successes has been to increase the number of girls getting the human papillomavirus vaccine (HPV) by their 13th birthday. The vaccine can help prevent a virus that increases the risk of cervical cancer.
The project kicked off in October 2011. At the time, the team wasn’t tracking how many of the girls in the target population had received the vaccination, which is delivered in a series of three shots over six months. The team’s initial goal was to get 5 percent of the girls eligible for the shot vaccinated. In the first six months, the team succeeded in getting 10 percent of the target population started on the series—and by October 2013, nearly 20 percent had gotten the complete series, a significant achievement. While it has yet to reach the national HEDIS average for the vaccination, the team is steadily closing the gap.
Team members achieved these results by working with the clinic’s information technology staff to get a list of patients—11- and 12-year old girls—who needed the vaccine. They contacted parents and made appointments. In the exam room, nurses discussed HPV and the importance of the vaccine with patients and their parents.
And they worked with their IT colleagues again, modifying the computer system so they could book appointments six months in advance. That allowed them to act on a crucial step—scheduling visits for the two follow-up booster shots right then and there.
The parent education was extremely important, says Erica Reynolds, the charge nurse and management co-lead.
“Some parents think we want people to come back in for appointments because we want the co-payments,” she says—but in fact, if the shots aren’t completed in the proper time period and the immunization series needs to be started all over, it requires even more visits. To avoid that, she says, “Scheduling a nurse visit for the second and third vaccines has become a part of our workflow.”
That kind of hard-wiring of successful practices is the holy grail of performance improvement.
As labor co-lead Boyd puts it, “Our projects are not ‘projects.’ They are ongoing.”
In addition, Dr. Jones says, the integration of partnership and performance is taking place at all levels in the region.
For example, he says, physician leaders “integrate the Labor Management Partnership and performance improvement into existing meetings so it is not viewed as outside those discussions.”
As a result, when Georgia earned a five-star Medicare rating in fall 2013 for the first time—bringing all of KP’s regions into that rarified club of health care excellence—Rob Schreiner, MD, the region’s executive medical director, specifically credited UBTs and the culture of continuous improvement for the achievement.
Driven by those two engines, says Schreiner, “We’ll improve quality, service and affordability at a tempo that exceeds that of our competitors.”
Erica Reynolds, Erica.X.Reynolds@kp.org, 770-322-2713
Sheryl Boyd, 770-322-2713
David Jones, MD, David.W.Jones@kp.org, 770-322-2710
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians, and UBT consultants.
Best used:
Use this tipsheet with ideas to increase patients' health screenings on bulletin boards, to prompt discussion at team meetings and as a starter for performance improvement projects.
This poster, from the May/June 2013 Bulletin Board Packet, contains tips for improving health screening rates.
When the North Lancaster Primary Care Team B unit-based team decided to work on improving colorectal screening rates, they adapted one from their colleagues at the West Salem Medical Office.
This two-pronged approach included both an outreach system and a plan to ensure team members were delivering a consistent message.
“Our patients are not a number or a statistic, they are a person, and they are looking for us to take care of them,” says department administrator, Primary Care, Phillip Taylor, who was the team’s co-lead at the time the project was underway.
So, team members made it personal.
They told the story of how physicians in the clinic had tested positive, but because the disease was detected early, they got treatment in time and are doing well.
In addition, the team identified its eligible patients between the ages of 50 and 75. When one of those patients came into the clinic, the medical assistant would talk about the importance of the test, give them a FIT kit to take home and return in the mail. When physicians saw patients, they would reiterate the need to do the test.
Nurses also played a role.
They would track the distribution of the kits and follow up with the patient if the kit had not been returned. When they spoke to patients, they would mention the physician was looking for the kit and the importance of returning it.
The combination of methods worked better than hoped—the team shot past its target by nearly seven percentage points.
“We’re looking for early detection,” says labor co-lead and medical assistant, Bill Waters, SEIU Local 49. “Colorectal cancer can hit anybody, and we explain how it’s impacted our own providers at our clinic. We add a personal touch by telling our story, and people respond.”
Adding a personal story about the importance of returning a FIT kit helped this team in the Northwest shoot past its goal for improving the rate of return for the cancer-screening test.
Format:
PPT
Size:
1 Slide
Intended audience:
LMP employees, UBT consultants, improvement advisers
Best used:
This PowerPoint slide features a Maryland team that improved mammogram rates through better communication. Use in presentations to show some of the methods used and the measurable results being achieved by unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente.
This PowerPoint slide, from the January/February 2013 Bulletin Board Packet, features a Maryland team that improved mammogram rates through better communication.
This poster, which appears in the January/February 2013 Bulletin Board Packet, highlights a Maryland team that improved its mammogram screening rate.
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians, and UBT consultants
Best used:
Help team members (and patients) avoid the flu by posting on bulletin boards and sharing in team meetings and huddles.
Get this related poster:
Flu prevention helps employees and members be well. Check out these tips to beat the flu.
A patient comes in to Redlands clinic to fix lenses on his eyeglasses and ends up with eye-saving surgery, thanks to an optical UBT's new workflow.
The team in the Head and Neck Surgery/Audiology department at the South Bay Medical Center had been compiling monthly reports about missed second blood pressure checks.
And this can be a critical point for a patient’s care because high blood pressure is often called “the silent killer.” Those who have it often don’t exhibit symptoms until it’s extremely high, and untreated hypertension can lead to heart disease, stroke and kidney problems.
But the team reviewed the numbers without a follow-up plan.
So, they decided to have morning huddles several days a week to explain the screenings and follow with plans of action.
“We discuss why this is important and what it means to our members, that it can save lives, especially for those who haven’t been diagnosed,” says Kathy Malovich, the department administrator.
UBT leaders provided team members with their individual performance scores on administering needed second blood pressure tests. They customized training and other follow-up plans, including coaching the team on procedures for Proactive Office Encounters (a process that takes advantage of a member’s visit to ensure the member gets any needed tests or appointments).
At huddles, they discussed the importance of controlling high blood pressure for patients. They emphasized that not only was it a strategic clinical goal but a Performance Sharing Program (PSP) goal for the medical center.
“People think they’ve done the second test because they know they should have,” says Leroy Foster, who was the department administrator when the test of change began. “Maybe they got distracted by any number of things.” Foster said the hard data helped motivate the team.
With a low of 35 percent for second blood tests, each team member jumped to 92 percent or better in a year. Four of the six team members hit 100 percent. In 10 months, team scores for second blood tests went up from 84.8 to 92.1 percent.
Huddling was also a key to success.
“I used to think, ‘you guys have way too many meetings,’” Jennell Jones, the union co-lead, says. “But now I see how meeting keeps people connected.”
A speciality department at South Bay Medical Center learns the value of routine screenings and gets results.