SuperScrubs: A Path to Performance
In this edition of Hank magazine's full-page comic, our superhero shares tools for UBTs to use on their path to performance.
In this edition of Hank magazine's full-page comic, our superhero shares tools for UBTs to use on their path to performance.
Don’t be surprised to have your medical record checked when you walk in for a flu shot at Lakewood Medical Office in Denver, Colorado. Medical Imagining and the Flu Clinic teams worked together to identify patients who needed a mammogram.
Kaiser Permanente members in Colorado got a little extra care and attention last year when they came for their flu shots at the Lakewood Medical Office. Medical Imagining and the Flu Clinic teams worked together to identify patients who needed a mammogram.
This postcard, which appears in the May/June 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features a UBT from the Mid-Atlantic States that was able to increase the percentage of patients whose blood pressure was under control.
This postcard, which appears in the May/June 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features a Colorado team that worked with its flu clinic colleagues to get more members in for mammography screenings.
This PowerPoint slide from the May/June 2015 Bulletin Board Packet features a Burke Primary Care UBT from the Mid-Atlantic States that was able to increase the percentage of patients whose blood pressure was under control.
Format:
PPT
Size:
1 Slide
Intended audience:
LMP employees, UBT consultants, improvement advisers
Best used:
This PowerPoint features a Colorado Medical Imaging UBT at Lakewood Medical Center that worked with its flu clinic colleagues to bring attention to members who were due for a mammography screening. 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 May/June 2015 Bulletin Board Packet features a Colorado Medical Imaging UBT at Lakewood Medical Center that worked with its flu clinic colleagues to bring attention to a member who was due for a mammography screening.
Consistency, communication and collaboration were the secret to eliminating two common hospital-acquired infections--and to sustaining that result for four years. Its work has earned the ICU in Woodland Hills a prestigious award.
Like ICUs around the country, the Woodland Hills team struggled to protect patients from contracting ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and central line-associated bloodstream infections.
Both conditions, among the most common hospital-acquired infections, can lengthen hospital stays, complicate recovery and even cause death.
But care improved dramatically after the team took steps that focused on patient safety and quality, and they credited a culture of collaboration as the key component to their success.
“It’s about working in partnership with physicians, nurses and other staff to deliver high-quality care based on the newest evidence,” says Lynne Scott, RN, a clinical nurse specialist for the Critical Care and the Definitive Observation Unit. “We’re constantly moving forward.”
They had their nurses place patients at the optimal angle of 30 degrees to ensure that fluids didn’t collect in their lungs, and also made sure that patients received routine oral care.
For greater oversight, two nurses changed the dressing 24 hours after the line was placed and were responsible for changing it weekly. The charge nurses were also involved, checking the dressing, IV tubing and injection ports twice a day.
And in further support, ICU employees held daily multidisciplinary rounds. This involved everyone on the care team who touched the patient, including physicians, nurses, dietitians, pharmacists, medical social workers and family members.
As of this writing, the results were nearly immediate with no patients contracting VAP or central line-associated bloodstream infections since late 2011.
Their efforts netted the team the 2015 Gold Beacon Award for Excellence from the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses, the world’s largest specialty nursing organization. The award recognizes hospital units that demonstrate exceptional care through improved outcomes and greater overall patient satisfaction.
Read more about what the team did to improve communication and collaboration.
Woodland Hills ICU relies on communication, collaboration and reliable systems to get rid of two common infections and sustain the results for four years.
Want to save time and money? Be willing to borrow successful practices from others. From the Spring 2015 Hank.
How one team spread a proven practice and multiplied its benefits. From the Spring 2015 Hank.