Culture

UBT Sponsor Summit PowerPoint Template

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 11/28/2017 - 17:54
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ED-1274

Speakers can use this deck for their presentations, sharing their successful practices in UBT sponsorship-related work.  

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PPT

Size:
3-slide deck 

Intended audience:
UBT sponsors, UBT consultants, public affairs staff, regional and facility-level LMP staff, and others involved in planning a sponsor summit

Best used:
Speakers can use this deck for their presentations, sharing their successful practices in UBT sponsorship-related work.  

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Eight-Hour UBT Sponsor Summit Agenda Template

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 11/28/2017 - 17:44
Format
Keywords
Topics
ED-1274

This editable template, designed with the Growing UBT Sponsors theme, makes it easy to put together the agenda for your summit. 

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
DOCX

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
UBT sponsors, UBT consultants, public affairs staff, regional and facility-level LMP staff, and others involved in planning a sponsor summit 

Best used:
This editable template, designed with the Growing UBT Sponsors theme, makes it easy to put together the agenda for your daylong summit. All the text can be edited; click on "Month XX, XXXX" to get started! 

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Four-Hour UBT Sponsor Summit Agenda Template

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 11/28/2017 - 17:36
Format
Keywords
Topics
ED-1274

This editable template, designed with the Growing UBT Sponsors theme, makes it easy to put together the agenda for your summit. 

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
DOCX

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
UBT sponsors, UBT consultants, public affairs staff, regional and facility-level LMP staff, and others involved in planning a sponsor summit 

Best used:
This editable template, designed with the Growing UBT Sponsors theme, makes it easy to put together the agenda for your half-day summit. All the text can be edited; click on "Month XX, XXXX" to get started! 

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Tip Sheet for Developing a UBT Sponsor Summit Agenda

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 11/28/2017 - 17:30
Tool Type
Format
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Topics
ED-1274

Use these ideas, including potential training topics, to plan your four- or eight-hour summit. 

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
UBT sponsors, UBT consultants, public affairs staff, regional and facility-level LMP staff, and others involved in planning a sponsor summit 

Best used:
Use this ideas to develop the agenda for your four- or eight-hour UBT sponsor summit. Includes a list of potential training topics. 

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Timeline for a UBT Sponsor Summit

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 11/28/2017 - 17:23
Tool Type
Format
Keywords
Topics
ED-1274

This six-month timeline will help keep the planning committee for a UBT sponsor summit on track. 

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
UBT sponsors, UBT consultants, public affairs staff, regional and facility-level LMP staff, and others involved in planning a sponsor summit 

Best used:
Rely on this six-month timeline to keep the planning committee for a UBT sponsor summit on track, with each category of tasks arrayed on overlapping bars. Print out and use this timeline when you begin planning your summit and throughout your preparations to keep you on track for a successful event. Use with the companion planning guide, which details individual tasks.  

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Puzzles and Games Answers Laureen Lazarovici Mon, 11/20/2017 - 17:13
PDF
hank
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Puzzles and Games Answers
Tool Type
Format
Hank

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Find out the answers to the puzzles and games in the last 12 issues of Hank. There is one page for each issue, so scroll down to the one you want. 

ED-1187

Get the answers to the puzzles and games that ran in the last 12 Hank issues.

Beverly White
Tyra Ferlatte
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Past, Present and Future

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Fri, 09/08/2017 - 17:14
Region
Topics
Hank
Request Number
ED-1171
Long Teaser

Voices from the front lines, reflecting on LMP's 20th anniversary—looking back on the past and on to the future. 

Communicator (reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Tyra Ferlatte
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The view from the high road
Story body part 1

As we celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Labor Management Partnership, Hank would like to call out the tens of thousands of individuals who have made partnership a success: the frontline workers, managers and physicians who have believed in our ideals and taken the time to build the positive working relationships that are the backbone of this groundbreaking endeavor.

Visit Humans of Partnership to read their stories—and look through their eyes into our past, our present and our future. 

 

 

 

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A Dose of Fun

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 09/05/2017 - 15:38
Region
Keywords
Topics
Hank
Request Number
ED-1146
Long Teaser

Co-leads administering a dose of fun helps shake up a department that had low morale. 

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Keep Your Team Going Strong

Your team is tight. You plan, do, study and act with one hand tied behind your back. But sustaining success can be a challenge even for the best of teams. Keep your UBT going strong with these proven tools. 

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A Dose of Fun
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Co-leads use laughter to help their team—and themselves
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When Terri Imbach, Family Practice manager at Mt. Scott Medical Office in the Northwest region, and labor co-lead Christina English, a licensed practical nurse and a member of SEIU Local 49, began to work together as UBT co-leads several years ago, they knew they needed to shake things up with the department’s unit-based team. 

The staff worked hard to meet the demanding needs of the fast-paced medical office, but morale wasn’t great—and team members weren’t taking ownership of improvement work. UBT meetings were poorly attended and often turned into complaining sessions.  

The co-leads’ first move was to go to UBT training classes together. That experience gave them an idea for their next move—which was to shake things up between the two of them by stepping away from work and getting to know each other outside the office. 

“Getting out of the work environment is a good way to get away from the stress of the department,” explains English. This mindset set the tone for how they would operate together and helped them sustain a good relationship over time.

The co-leads also adopted “fun” as part of their regular UBT agenda, and meetings now are attended by nearly 100 percent of the staff.  

“We think of fun ways to get to know each other in and out of the office, and we work to include fun elements in all of our meetings,” Imbach says. During the holidays, team members played relay games at their UBT meeting, and they participated in a fundraiser for a local youth organization that included playing basketball on donkeys. 

The creative energy of the co-leads has helped engage all 40 members of the Level 5 team, who are juggling more than a dozen quality projects. 

“Team members step up to take on projects now,” English says, “and there are friendly competitions to meet our goals.”

 

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Partnership: Just What the Doctor Ordered

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 09/05/2017 - 14:54
Region
Keywords
Topics
Hank
Request Number
ED-1139
Long Teaser

This physician was skeptical about unit-based teams at first. But after seeing solid results in helping patients manage hypertension and diabetes, he's a believer and advocate. 

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Partnership: Just What the Doctor Ordered
Deck
Georgia physician becomes an LMP advocate
Story body part 1

Emile Pinera, MD, a second-generation Kaiser Permanente employee, came to the company five years ago and immediately became co-lead of an adult medicine unit-based team in the Georgia region.

“I had the clinical part down,” says Pinera, who is now lead physician for diversity and inclusion in Georgia and an adviser on the region’s transgender task force. But being a co-lead and working in a UBT were unfamiliar. “I had to implement my medical knowledge in a team, as opposed to a top-down approach where the doctor tells everyone what to do.” 

He wasn’t convinced at first—but the partnership approach and physician participation helped elevate the team’s performance, and it posted some of the region’s highest quality scores for managing diabetes and blood pressure. 

“We achieved it through hard work and collaboration,” Pinera says. “I loved working with my management and labor co-leads. We were respectfully honest about what was achievable. Working in the UBT gave us the tools to effectively communicate, track, adjust and improve.”

Pinera currently guides and supports co-leads as a UBT sponsor for three teams and is lead physician for three adult medicine offices. His enthusiasm helps his teams, the members and the Georgia region. 

“I was skeptical at first about UBTs’ relevance, but we couldn’t achieve our success with hypertension and diabetes management without each other’s help. I’m a believer,” he says. “My tip for fellow providers is to be engaged as much as possible, because it will help us achieve better outcomes and help our patients thrive.”

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Listening Is Key for Audiology Co-Leads

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 09/05/2017 - 12:41
Hank
Request Number
ED-1137
Long Teaser

How a shared appreciation of each other’s different skills and background helps this unit-based team succeed. 

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
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Tyra Ferlatte
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Tips and Tools For Rookie Co-Leads

Learn from each other. Successful co-leads show mutual respect and enhance their working relationship by sharing wisdom, knowledge and experience. 

Participate. Be engaged. Check in often with your co-lead, UBT members and sponsor. 

Practice partnership basics. A shared understanding of partnership and partnering skills is essential. Take trainings in LMP orientation, consensus decision making and interest-based problem solving. 

Lead by example. Actively listen and encourage feedback from each other. As UBT co-leads, you serve as role models for your team. 

Don’t fear failure. Not every project and initiative will work, but they all are learning experiences and provide an opportunity to improve. 

Find additional tools, tips, stories, support and more in our online leadership toolkit.

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Listening Is Key for Audiology Co-Leads
Deck
Appreciating each other’s different skills and background helps relationship sing
Story body part 1

“You have two ears and one mouth for a reason,” television’s Judge Judy frequently says, quoting an ancient Greek philosopher. “You should listen twice as much as you talk.” Successful co-leads realize that making a partnership work requires listening and learning from one another. 

Caroline Masikonde, RN, had been a management co-lead with the urgent care team at Largo Medical Center in the Mid-Atlantic States, an experience that helped her understand the importance of valuing her partner’s input. But when she accepted a new role as clinical operations manager in Northern Virginia Audiology in January 2016, she didn’t have any experience in audiology. So she’s relied heavily on her new labor co-lead, Lynn M. Reese, Au.D., a UFCW Local 400 member. Masikonde has learned why audiology UBT members escort patients outside (so they can try out new hearing aids in different conditions)—and her willingness to listen helped the co-leads bond quickly. 

“Lynn is very experienced,” says Masikonde. “I lean on her even now.” 

Reese, on the other hand, was new to the unit-based team structure, since the audiology UBT had just formed. That’s where Masikonde’s expertise came in. “We fit together pretty well,” says Reese. “Caroline is very open to listening and learning new things.”

Reese, too, expanded her knowledge, growing into an appreciation that she and Masikonde have equal say on what’s now a Level 4 UBT. “Everyone contributes,” says Reese. The ability to speak up led to Reese and the rest of the team requesting and receiving approval for an additional booth to test patients’ hearing. 

Relationship tested

Their new relationship was tested when a member—after waiting more than 12 weeks for a refund on a hearing aid that had cost more than $1,000—alerted them, loudly and angrily, to the problem. 

Instead of pointing fingers, UBT members figured out the issue: The refund request had to be processed through a department in Southern California, but the team had no way to follow up once the request was submitted. 

“This lady forced us to look at this and do better for our members,” Masikonde says. “It prompted us to come up with a better workflow,” and now the team has names and contact information for the people who work on the refunds.

“Even though it was a bad situation, she made us want to improve,” Reese says. 

Because the co-leads already were accustomed to relying on and listening to each other, they were able to quickly and calmly handle this tense situation with the unhappy member.

“We really learned our lesson,” Masikonde says. “Recently, we did a refund on a Monday—and by Friday, the member had the check. Lynn and I know our parts and do our dance.”

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