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Adopting or adapting an idea from elsewhere can be the fastest way to a win. From the Spring 2015 Hank.
Adopting or adapting an idea from elsewhere can be the fastest way to a win. From the Spring 2015 Hank.
In this short video, the Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit at Kaiser Permanente's Downey Medical Center shows how its incorporating the patient voice into it's performance improvement efforts.
In this short video, see how the Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit at Kaiser Permanente's Downey Medical Center is turning parents' ideas for improvements into reality.
This postcard, which appears in the March/April 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features how a Cardiology unit-based team reduces waste and improves service.
This postcard, which appears in the March/April 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features how a Genetics team reaches more patients with smoking cessation information.
This postcard, which appears in the January/February 2015 Bulletin Board Packet, features a Health Education team from the Northern California that has gotten more new moms breastfeeding their babies.
The work of the Health Education UBT at the Manteca Medical Center helps improve the breastfeeding rates for Northern California's Central Valley service area.
Inspired by the goals of the worldwide “Baby-Friendly Hospital” initiative, the Health Education UBT at the Manteca Medical Center in Northern California set out in early 2012 to increase the percentage of new mothers who exclusively breastfeed. At the time, the number stood at 70 percent.
Steps emphasized by the initiative, sponsored by UNICEF and the World Health Organization (WHO), include training health care staff to inform every pregnant woman of the benefits of breastfeeding and to help mothers begin breastfeeding within one hour of giving birth.
The challenge was that while Manteca health educators provided prenatal services to expectant mothers, the moms went to Modesto to deliver their babies. The Manteca employees didn’t always learn whether their patients ended up breastfeeding. In order to make sure their patients were getting full support for breastfeeding as they made the transition from prenatal care to labor and delivery and beyond, the members of the Manteca UBT reached out to their hospital colleagues.
“As a Health Education department, we provide breastfeeding education during their prenatal care, but we were not reaching 100 percent of…moms after they switched to hospital services,” says Maria Prieto de Milian, a health educator, lactation consultant and active SEIU-UHW representative on the Manteca UBT. “There was not a consistent breastfeeding message.
“Our moms were in need of a continuum of care for breastfeeding.”
The Manteca team, which meets monthly, is linked to a larger Health Education UBT at Modesto. The larger team meets quarterly and includes Modesto employees as well as the employees from the smaller teams at Manteca, Tracy and Stockton.
After researching best practices in breastfeeding support and exploring what other Kaiser Permanente locations were doing, the Manteca team introduced two small tests of change:
The results were dramatic. By the end of 2012, 92 percent of Manteca prenatal care patients who delivered at the Modesto hospital were exclusively breastfeeding.
The umbrella UBT decided to spread Manteca’s idea.
“We turned it into a service-area initiative. It started as a pilot just for Manteca, and then the group decided it was so beneficial we’d roll it out to the whole Central Valley,” says Jose Salcedo, the management co-lead for the larger UBT. “The results were really conducive to parents and moms having a great experience. It’s a whole pathway from the early stages of pregnancy to the delivery and then to the pediatricians.”
“The breastfeeding initiative is now regular workflow throughout the Central Valley,” Salcedo said.
At the time the Manteca UBT started its effort to improve breastfeeding rates, the Modesto hospital was working to achieve the Baby Friendly designation from the UNICEF-WHO program. After making significant progress toward that goal, it switched its focus to implementing the Northern California region’s Breastfeeding Toolkit, a new program that encompasses the same goals.
It's now been almost two years since the small tests of change, and Prieto de Milian says the Manteca UBT no longer is tracking the rate for its moms, viewing the project as a continued success.
New ideas are continually being added to strengthen the process. These include the advice call center providing 24/7 breastfeeding support while also scheduling follow-ups to the calls with lactation educators. In addition, lactation consultants are available to assist pediatricians by phone or by email on KP HealthConnect® during patient appointments.
With everyone’s minds and hearts on one goal, Salcedo and Prieto de Milian say, teamwork was seamless.
“What I like about the UBT is it’s a joint effort,” Salcedo says. “We have really good lactation educators who think outside the box, search for best practices and apply them. They went ahead and ran with it and made the recommendations. Management supported them all the way.”
Unit-based teams bring the voice of frontline workers, managers and physicians to improving health care at Kaiser Permanente. Some UBTs go one step further and include the patient voice. Find out how they do it.
Adopting a best practice from another team, the Infusion Center in the Northwest improves care delivery for its patients. From the Fall 2014 Hank.
The word “rapid” stopped Kathy Stafford, RN, and made her ask more questions.
Stafford, the UBT co-lead and charge nurse for the Regional Infusion Center in the Northwest, had been reading an email from a Colorado colleague. The colleague wondered whether the center was using a new protocol for Remicade, an infusion drug prescribed for such diseases as Crohn’s, rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatric arthritis. The Colorado infusion center was trying a new “rapid” Remicade delivery method and looking to see what the experience of others had been.
The Northwest still was using the standard method, and Stafford, a member of the Oregon Nurses Association, was instantly curious. A regular Remicade infusion takes 3½ hours—three hours for the delivery of the drug, and then, to be sure there are no adverse effects, the patient has to wait 30 minutes before being discharged. The new protocol reduces that to a total of 1½ hours.
“If there is anything we can do to speed up infusions for our patients,” Stafford says, “it would be a service to them and, at the same time, save the organization money.”
In short, Stafford was putting the patient at the center of her decision making, bringing the Value Compass to life. The rapid Remicade protocol improves the patient’s care experience and improves service, quality, affordability and staff satisfaction:
“Any chance we have to be more effective is worth it, so we can spend more time with our patients,” Stafford says.
Following up on the initial email inquiry, Stafford learned the evidence-based practice already was being used in Colorado and the California regions. She and Greg Frazier, the assistant department administrator and UBT management co-lead, pushed ahead with getting the protocol approved for use in the Northwest, benefitting all the region’s eligible patients.
“There was no stopping Kathy,” Frazier says. “She knew who to talk to in the organization and how to move things along….
“Our team is always looking at how to do things better, and to take care of the patient the best we can,” Frazier continues. Noting that the infusion team is highly motivated and self-directed, he offered words of encouragement to those who see an opportunity they want to pursue.
“Don’t turn away from a challenge. Ask questions,” he says. “It may not work, but look into it first before you discount it.”
Stafford credits the team for getting the new protocol approved so quickly, despite a complex approval process that included meetings with both physicians and pharmacists.
“Without the enthusiasm and involvement of the infusion RN team, this would not have gone as smoothly,” she says. “We found out about the protocol in March and we began implementation in May. That’s pretty fast.”
Break up a team meeting with a little fun with this Hank Lib, a fill-in-the-blanks puzzle about caring for patients with heart. From the Fall 2014 Hank.
Check out the presentations from the teams participating in the virtual UBT fair on involving patients in performance improvement.