Workforce of the Future

ED Takes a Group Approach to Skill Building

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Tue, 11/01/2016 - 14:43
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sty_SCAL_Panorama City_ED_careerRx1
Long Teaser

When you’re busy with day-to-day patient care, tending to your personal career goals isn’t easy.

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Photos taken/8/26 AMc
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From left, Rebecca Linares, ward clerk transcriber and SEIU-UHW member, emergency room assistant Richard Rowland, SEIU-UHW, and assistant department administrator Sylvana Hrovatic.
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Sylvana Hrovatic, Sylvana.C.Hrovatic@kp.org

Additional resources

For more information on the SEIU-UHW Joint Employer Education Trust, visit www.seiu-uhweduc.org.

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Spreading the Word

As a union steward, Becky Linares is spreading the word by:

  • talking to her co-workers about the education trust programs.
  • bringing LMP Workforce Planning and Development materials to union stewards’ meetings.
  • posting fliers about the trust in her department and others.

“I don’t just keep it in the emergency room,” Linares says. “I want people to know there is money there to support their careers.”

For more information or career counseling, visit www.kpcareerplanning.org. Or, for SEIU members, www.seiu-uhweduc.org.

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ED takes a group approach to skill building
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UBT takes charge of its own career development, improves patient service
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Most people think about advancing their careers as a personal goal—if and when they get the time and support to map out a plan. But Panorama City’s Emergency Department unit-based team saw that boosting the team’s skills also matters to KP members, patients and the department. It used collaboration—and LMP trust funds—to improve the workflow and put several staff members on a solid career path.

“It’s not just about making more money. It’s also about being able to provide the best care possible,” says Richard Rowland, one of two emergency room assistants finishing courses needed to earn promotions to emergency service technician positions.

Early last year, the unit-based team started a “door-to-doc” project aimed at moving patients more efficiently through the ER. Results soon stalled because many staff members lacked the training or official certifications to help nurses with such triage duties as drawing blood and organizing labs. About that time, Sylvana Hrovatic arrived as assistant department administrator and management co-lead. She was focused on improving patient service and care, and says it was her labor partners who steered the conversation to career development.

With the help of ward clerk transcriber Becky Linares, labor co-lead and an SEIU UHW steward, the UBT reached out to the SEIU UHW-West & Joint Employer Education Fund to create a plan for employee career advancement in the department.

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Workforce of the Future

The future of health care starts with you.

We want to help you sharpen your skills to do the best job possible.

All employees can search career paths, use tuition reimbursement to take courses and explore Workforce Development Week to connect with resources to build your career.

Eligible union members can:

tyra.l.ferlatte Tue, 11/01/2016 - 14:32

Advance Your KP Career

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Tue, 11/01/2016 - 14:31
Tool Type
Format
tool_10tips_WFPD_careeratKP

Make workforce development a personal priority. Use these best practices to seek out training, stipends, counseling and other support to take control of your career path.

Sherry Crosby
Non-LMP
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Advance Your KP Career

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
Frontline employees and their managers and teams

Best used:
To spark discussion and help build your skills and prepare for the health care jobs of the future.


 

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Connecting the Dots With Popular Education

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Wed, 10/26/2016 - 00:51
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sty_popular_education
Long Teaser

The LMP is using popular education strategies to improve business and economic literacy on the front line. Staff at the Woodland Hills Medical Center describe how the training brings potentially dry subjects to life.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
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UBT consultants work together dividing beans into cups to illustrate wealth inequality in the U.S. as part of a workshop by United for a Fair Economy using popular education techniques
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Business and Economic Literacy

Because more health care expense is shifting to the patient, it's important to know what you can offer. As they spend more, they expect more.

Learn where Kaiser Permanente dollars come from—and where they go—so you can provide the best customer service.

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Connecting the dots with popular education
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LMP course brings business, economic issues to life
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Receptionist Sam Eckstein encourages his co-workers at the Woodland Hills Medical Center lab not only to meet—but to exceed—patient expectations of excellent service. To back up his coaching, he’s using the knowledge he gained in a new LMP course on business and economic literacy.

During the course, Eckstein and about a dozen other workers and managers learned about the rising cost of health insurance in the United States and the trend toward businesses’ shifting more health care costs to employees.

Because patients are paying more, “Their expectations are higher,” says Eckstein, a member of SEIU UHW. “When patients come in without an order [for a lab procedure], we can’t just send them home,” and inconvenience them by making them come back another day, he says. “We have to help meet their needs.”

Eckstein took part in a pilot project to test the Labor Management Partnership’s new approach using popular education techniques to ensure frontline employees and managers have the context and know-how they need to continue improving team performance and keep Kaiser Permanente affordable.

What’s different about popular education?

Popular education turns the old-fashioned schoolroom model of teaching and learning on its head. It is ideally suited to the Labor Management Partnership, which is built on the belief that all employees, managers and physicians bring their expertise and experience to bear on improving service and care at KP. No longer is the teacher or trainer the sole expert in the classroom, there to fill students’ minds with information they passively receive, memorize and repeat.

Instead, popular education taps into participants’ experiences in their communities and workplaces and uses them to generate dialogue. It explores the social and economic context of students’ lives and asks probing questions: What are people happy about? Worried about? Fearful about? Hopeful about? Students are encouraged to analyze that information—and to take action.

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Make the Workplace Safer: Computer Users

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Wed, 08/31/2016 - 17:46
Tool Type
Format
WPD Checklist_Computer Users

A hands-on checklist of 32 potential hazards computer users and office workers may encounter on the job—with advice on how to spot hazards, propose solutions and take steps to eliminate risks.

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Make the Workplace Safer: Computer Users

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PDF

Size:
Five pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Workplace safety co-leads, safety committee members and safety champions

Best used:
This checklist of 32 potential hazards can help workplace safety leaders and workers conduct onsite walk-throughs and identify safety risks for computer users and office staff.

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Training Workers to Go Green

  • Negotiating education funding as part of the national agreements between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions
  • Carving out time for workers to attend classes in how to reduce waste and use non-toxic cleaning products
  • Mobilizing environmental services workers to educate other KP employees and managers about green practices in a variety of departments

What can your team do to build career resiliency and adapt to change in the workplace? What else could your team do engage everyone in lifelong learning?

Around the Regions (Winter 2016) Laureen Lazarovici Mon, 12/21/2015 - 16:05
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Around the Regions (Winter 2016)
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Newsy bits from the landscape of Kaiser Permanente
Request Number
sty_Hank46_Around the Regions_Winter2016
Long Teaser

Newsy bits from every Kaiser Permanente region.

Story body part 1

Colorado

The Colorado region is improving patient care and saving millions by providing high-risk patients extra attention after discharge, leading to a reduction in readmission rates. In the Post Acute Care Transitions (PACT) program, nurse practitioners visit patients in their homes after discharge from a hospital or skilled nursing facility, giving them a chance to alter the patient’s care plan if needed. The PACT team has visited approximately 4,200 high-risk patients since the program began in January 2013. At that time, 22 percent of high-risk patients were readmitted within 30 days, at a cost of $11.7 million. The PACT team has reduced readmission rates by 50 percent, saving Kaiser Permanente approximately $6 million since the program began.

Georgia

To make sure no good deed goes uncopied, the Georgia region launched a Spread and Sustain system to move best practices throughout the region—and showed off the results to KP’s board of directors at a UBT fair early last summer. Georgia took a spread blueprint from the Southern California region and fine-tuned it to meet its needs. Now its unit-based teams, sponsors and regional leaders identify projects with good spread potential, determine other locations where the new process could work, share the practice and check back to see how they’re being sustained. Several projects have been successfully spread region-wide—addressing such issues as hypertension, HPV vaccinations and lab specimen collection.

Hawaii

Hawaii is a beautiful place to live, but Kaiser Permanente members who live on the less-populated islands sometimes find it challenging to get the care they need. To address that, KP offers a special benefit called Travel Concierge Service. If health plan members need medical care that isn’t available on their island, KP assists them in traveling to the Moanalua Medical Center in Oahu or to a specialty care medical office. KP makes the travel arrangements and picks up the tab for travel, including airfare, shuttle service and discounted hotel rates. For minors who need specialty care, KP also pays for companion travel. “Our members love this service,” says Lori Nanone, a sales and account manager in the region.

Mid-Atlantic States

For several years, co-leads in the Mid-Atlantic States have compiled monthly reports of their UBT activities, goals and progress using Microsoft Word and Excel. Now, the region is rolling out a dashboard that automatically compiles the same information from UBT Tracker into an easy-to-reference SharePoint site, Kaiser Permanente’s new online social collaboration tool. The new dashboard will encourage more frequent updates to UBT Tracker and eliminate the need for co-leads to create separate documents, says Jennifer Walker, lead UBT consultant and improvement advisor. “Now the information we get is more timely and easier to assess,” Walker says. “Before, the information was up to a month old.”

Northern California

The Santa Rosa Medical Center Diversity Design committee is equipping employees with tools to help them provide better service to Spanish-speaking patients. The group, composed of labor and management, has been piloting a handout featuring a list of common Spanish phrases, such as ¿Necesita un intérprete? (“Do you need an interpreter?”), as well as instructions on using the phone interpreter system. The idea came from a Spanish-speaking patient on the facility’s Latino patient advisory committee, who recalled the time she was lost in the facility and no one could direct her in Spanish. The Spanish language flier is the latest in the committee’s work to help ensure all patients receive the same optimal service and care.

Northwest

Unit-based teams in the Continuing Care Services department are focusing on improving the experience for some of Kaiser Permanente’s most vulnerable members: those in skilled nursing facilities or receiving home health, hospice or palliative care. Teams are focusing on ensuring better transitions for patients as they go from inpatient to ambulatory care. By identifying issues before they become problems, labor and management hope to coordinate care more effectively, reduce emergency department visits and cut down on outside medical costs.

Southern California

Harmony comes easily when you use the tools of partnership. Just ask the Biohazards, a band of union members and a manager that uses partnership principles to guide performances. “We call ourselves an LMP project,” says Mary Anne Umekubo, a clinical laboratory scientist and Regional Laboratory assistant director who sings and plays percussion and guitar. She is among six band members who represent a variety of departments, shifts and unions, including SEIU-UHW and UFCW Local 770. Performing for friends and colleagues, band members use consensus decision making to choose songs, interest-based problem solving to fix mistakes and the Rapid Improvement Model to tweak performances. “We’re from different departments,” says drummer Eric Cuarez, a regional courier driver and SEIU-UHW member. “We come together to play music.”

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Southern California's Biohazards band, extending partnership tools into music-making.
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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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Request Number
workoffuture_nationalbargaining
Long Teaser

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.

Communicator (reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
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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Invent Our Future

Request Number
vid-106_invent_our_future
Long Teaser

In health care today, everybody has to be thinking and innovating. "Invent Our Future" shows how workers, managers and physicians are implementing new ideas, helping to secure their own futures and keeping Kaiser Permanente at the top of its game.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Video Media (reporters)
Download File URL
VID-106_Invent_Our_Future/VID-106_Invent_Our_Future_2.zip
Running Time
4:28
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Date of publication

In health care today, everybody has to be thinking and innovating. "Invent Our Future" shows how workers, managers and physicians are implementing new ideas, helping to secure their own futures and keeping Kaiser Permanente at the top of its game. Also see the companion discussion guide.

 

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Poster: Beating the Odds

Submitted by Beverly White on Thu, 10/30/2014 - 11:10
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bb2014_Beating_the_odds

This poster, which appears in the November/December 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, highlights a movie of Cassandra Phelps, a KP employee who took advantage of the career development programs available through the Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust.

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Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Beating the Odds

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Gain inspiration from Cassandra Phelps, who took advantage of career development opportunities and found herself in a place she never imagined!

See the 4-minute video here.

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