Workplace Safety

Five Tips for Leading Change

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Wed, 03/28/2012 - 17:42
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sty_helen_bevan_UDC
Long Teaser

Helen Bevan, a leader of the UK's National Healthcare Services, discusses how leaders can use the strategies of people like Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela to create the large-scale transformation necessary to meet current health care challenges.

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Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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The Five Tips

Following the social movement model, leaders need to:

  • tell a story
  • make it personal
  • be authentic
  • create a sense of “us”
  • build in a call for urgent action
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Headline (for informational purposes only)
Five tips on leading change
Deck
Helen Bevan, a British health care leader, looks to civil rights leaders and others to learn how to inspire large-scale transformation
Story body part 1

When Helen Bevan told her National Health Services colleagues in the United Kingdom she would be speaking at a conference of Kaiser Permanente union employees, they were surprised.

“What could they possibly learn from us?” they asked.

A lot, she says.

“Kaiser is a role model for us,” explains Bevan, chief of service transformation at the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement, part of the largest government-sponsored health care system in the world.“We look at and learn a lot from Kaiser in terms of innovations, efficiencies, use of new technology and its approach to patient care.”

We have much to learn from them as well—especially when it comes to large-scale change.

How to move forward

“To move forward in health care, leaders must tell their story, make it personal, create a sense of ‘us’ and include a call for action,” says Bevan, one of the plenary speakers at this year’s Union Delegates Conference in Hollywood. “The way to build and sustain health care reform is to learn the lessons of social movement leaders.”

Bevan’s point is on the mark. The 700 delegates attending the conference, themed “You Gotta Move,” were called to act on improving their own health and the health of their communities. They took that message to the streets of Hollywood, distributing fliers with tips on easy steps to take to improve health. Some also gathered for a flash mob in front of Hollywood’s Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, dancing to Beyonce’s “Move Your Body”—a song made for Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” campaign to end childhood obesity.

“It’s such a great experience to see the extent to which union members are stepping up to be a part of the change process,” Bevan says.

Building commitment and energy

The actions at the delegates conference—and beyond—are precisely what’s needed to reform health care in America and the world, she says, adding: “We can only create large-scale change if we build a platform of commitment and energy.” 

Because unit-based teams, KP’s platform for improvement, engage frontline workers, managers and physicians, they “already have that commitment and energy,” Bevan says. UBTs “create a sense of coming together around a common cause and achieving the same outcomes.”

But UBTs alone can’t bring about the large-scale change needed to meet the unprecedented challenges to improve quality and reduce costs.

Engage and inspire

“Transformation needs to occur at all levels of the organization in order for it to be sustainable,” Bevan says. “Senior leaders need to stop being pacesetters and start engaging, inspiring and emotionally connecting with employees. The passion is there. We just have to tap into it.”

As the task of delivering health and health care becomes more complex and the scale of change increases, “We need to think widely and innovatively about how we define the role of senior leaders,” Bevan says.

That’s where social movement thinking comes in. “Successful movements often have charismatic leaders—think Martin Luther King or Nelson Mandela—but what ultimately guides and mobilizes the movement are leaders at multiple levels.” The key, she says, is to depend less on reorganizing structures and processes as the catalyst for change and more on unleashing emotional and spiritual energy for change.

“People are much more likely to embrace change if it builds on the passion, the sense of a calling that got them into health care in the first place,” Bevan says. By connecting to that shared passion through storytelling, “We can create an unstoppable force for change.”

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Powerpoint: How a Contest Can Lead to Safety

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Wed, 11/02/2011 - 14:07
Tool Type
Format
Content Section
ppt_contest_lead_safety

This poster highlights a team that went nearly a year without any accepted claims for workplace injuries, after being one of the top 10 most injury-prone departments at its facility.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PPT

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
LMP staff, UBT consultants, performance improvement advisers

Best used:
This poster highlights a team that went nearly a year without any accepted claims for workplace injuries, after being one of the top 10 most injury-prone departments at its facility. Use in presentations to show some of the methods used and the measurable results being achieved by unit-based teams across Kaiser Permanente.

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Competition Can Create a Safer Workplace

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 08/12/2011 - 18:33
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Competition Can Create a Safer Workplace
Deck
Contest helps members alert their colleagues about unsafe practices

An industrial kitchen can be a dangerous place, with its sharp knives, wet floors, plentiful grease and hot temperatures.

Vanessa Bethea, a lead hospitality associate and member of SEIU UHW, still remembers when she witnessed a colleague being injured by a huge meat slicer.

The kitchen at the Panorama City Medical Center, where Bethea works, is a 54-member department, covering two shifts with staggered start times. It was also among the most injury-prone groups at the medical center, so hospital leadership asked the department to come up with a plan to improve its safety record.

The nine-member representative group for the UBT came up with the idea of dividing the department into two teams (simply named Team A and Team B) and sponsoring a friendly competition between them for a pair of movie tickets.

This motivated—and liberated—the staff to approach their colleagues who might be performing a task unsafely and suggest an alternative approach.

“We were ‘big brothering’ each other, which helped us catch things that could have led to an accident,” Bethea says. “It kept a friendly flow throughout the day and created more awareness of safety hazards.”

The team went nearly a year without any accepted claims for workplace injuries, down from about one injury a month.

Bethea says naysayers wanted to infect others in the department with negative attitudes, but the team overcame the hurdle by emphasizing how improving safety will help the whole department.

They also encouraged those naysayers to join the UBT’s representative group.

For more about this team's work to share with your team and spark performance improvement ideas, download a powerpoint.

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pdsa_Panoram City FANS_WPS
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Long Teaser

A Food and Nutrition Services department in Southern California goes injury free for 11 months after engaging staff members in a friendly competition for movie tickets.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Management co-lead(s)
Union co-lead(s)
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Checklist for Turn Team Captains

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Tue, 11/16/2010 - 16:18
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cklist_TurnCaptain

Checklist used by turn team captains in San Diego's 2 North/South Med-Surg units when the team turns or lifts a patient, to ensure the procedure is done safely and the chance of injury is minimized.

 

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
pdf of tool attached; jpeg in artwork section is for listings. tlf 12/7
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Checklist for Turn Team Captains

Format: 
PDF and Word DOC

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Captains of turn teams

Best used:
Use this checklist when turning a patient to ensure the procedure is done safely and the chance of injury is minimized. 
 

 

 

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Southern California
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Safety Observation Checklist

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Tue, 11/16/2010 - 16:12
Tool Type
Format
cklist_safetyobservation

Checklist used by San Diego's 2 North-South Medical-Surgical teams to help conduct safety observations while the team turns or lifts a patient.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
pdf of tool attached; jpeg in artwork section is for listings. tlf, 12/7
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Safety Observation Checklist for turning and lifting patients

Format:
PDF and Word DOC

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Safety observers.

Best used: This checklist can heighten awareness and use of safe patient-handling procedures. Used by San Diego's 2 North-South Medical-Surgical teams in conducting safety observations while the team turns or lifts a patient. (The PDF prints two copies of the checklist, so if, for example, you want 10 copies, print the document 5 times.)
 

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Keeping a Watch on Process Can Prevent Injury

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Tue, 11/16/2010 - 11:16
Headline (for informational purposes only)
Keeping a Watch on Process Can Prevent Injury
Deck
The entire department observed proper patient-turning technique and safety improved

The 2 North-South medical-surgical units in San Diego were identified as high-injury departments.

One year, the combined team saw 16 patient-handling injuries. Before that, the number was 18. Repetitive back and shoulder injuries were most common. As a result, management was told to eliminate injuries—fast.

The first step in the action plan required staff members to undergo Workplace Safety training on how to conduct safety observations. Each person then conducted three observations a week on teams turning patients and submitted those observations to a collection box in the department. The observations were logged into the Workplace Safety web-tracking tool.

Previously, only charge nurses and managers conducted the observations. But getting everyone involved kept proper patient-handling techniques constantly at the forefront of team members’ minds.

Getting buy-in from staff members was another challenge, so it didn’t feel like another thing on top of their regular workload.

“Make sure you communicate—and with some degree of consistency—to everyone,” nurse manager and RN Erlinda Aquino says. “And hard-wiring it so people understand it’s not just the flavor of the month.”

The UBT adapted a checklist of key things that should be done when turning a patient, such as ensuring a patient’s bed rails have been lowered. Turn-team captains referred to this checklist at every patient turning.

To help morale and maintain safe patient-handling techniques, the UBT set small, attainable goals the department could celebrate.

The team had a pizza party when it reached the first 100 days without an injury, then again after accruing no injuries for the month of July, which historically had been the units’ highest injury month.

“In the beginning, you have to consistently remind people,” says Tess Patiag-Limcuando, RN. “People felt that doing those steps just added to the time, not realizing that it would cost them a whole lot more time if they hurt themselves.”

It was also important to focus on the positive.

“Instead of emphasizing the negative, present it like, ‘I care about you; I want you to be safe.’ Versus: ‘You’re in trouble,’” Aquino says.

Caption information for photo/artwork (reporters)
The 2 North-South Med-Surg lift team turns a patient to help prevent pressure ulcers.
Request Number
pdsa_sd2NS_injuries
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Long Teaser

San Diego's 2 North-South Medical-Surgical team dramatically reduces patient-handling injuries by having all staff members conduct regular safety observations.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
**Please note: Link to 2 tools in highlighted box -- cb 11/16/10
Safety Observation Checklist: http://www.lmpartnership.org/tools/safety-observation-checklist
Turn-Team Captain Checklist: http://www.lmpartnership.org/tools/turn-team-captain-checklist
**Captions**
captions:
2nsmedsurg2.jpg -- Members of the 2NS Med-Surg team prepare to turn patient Deborah Allen to prevent pressure ulcers from developing.
2nsmedsurg3.jpg -- The 2 North-South Medical-Surgical UBT co-leads (left to right): Jennifer Flores, RN, UNAC/UHCP; Erlinda Aquino, manager, and Tess Patiag-Limcuando, RN, UNAC/UHCP.
Learn more (reporters)
Management co-lead(s)

Erlinda C. Aquino, Erlinda.C.Aquino@kp.org, 619-528-5976

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Poster: A Clear Vision of Safety

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Tue, 11/02/2010 - 11:33
Tool Type
Format
Role
Content Section
bb_clearvision_sandiego

This poster reveals how an Ophthalmology team went nearly one year without a workplace injury.

Non-LMP
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Poster: A Clear Vision of Safety

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience: 
Union Coalition-represented employees

Best used:
Help your staff make a safer workplace through ergonomic upgrades, training and uncluttered space.

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Ophthalmology Turns Vision of Safety Into Reality cassandra.braun Thu, 09/09/2010 - 12:39
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Southern California
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lmpartnership.org
Headline (for informational purposes only)
Ophthalmology Turns Vision of Safety Into Reality
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Deck
Identifying the problem areas was a good first step
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The San Diego Ophthalmology group had earned the dubious reputation as a high-injury department.

They had a quarterly injury rate of 23.6 and problems ranged from carpel tunnel to back issues. The majority of complaints was caused by sitting at the computer for long periods, typing and doing repetitive motions like using a mouse.

Medical assistants and technicians also frequently complained about having trouble navigating the cluttered, unsafe vision lanes—the small alcoves where nurses and medical assistants evaluate patients before escorting them to exam rooms.

Being flagged a high-injury department, the team was determined to identify the causes of the injuries and how to prevent them from occurring.  

The department took Workplace Safety training and instituted a number of measures to identify and fix potential hazards at all four ophthalmology departments. Those measures included ergonomic evaluations, new chairs and foot rests, and installing stretch break software on all computers.

They conducted regular safety checks and created the “I Spy” program, which has previously injured workers conducting safety observations to identify potential problems. 

The team also revamped the department’s vision lanes.

These often were cramped and potentially unsafe environments with electrical cables stretched across the narrow floor. Computers and blood pressure carts created additional tripping hazards. 

“You had to maneuver around patients and wheelchairs, and generally feel confined, waiting to trip or bend wrong,” says Anna Garcia, a medical assistant and UBT member.

So, they mounted blood pressure machines and KP HealthConnect computers on the walls, instead of using carts. They purchased new chairs for patients, particularly for older patients who have difficulty getting into narrow spots or are in wheelchairs.

By moving power outlets closer to the mounted equipment, electrical cords were no longer in the way. And they painted the walls that ophthalmologists used during eye examinations.  

“The nice thing is if I need to maneuver now, it’s not a move I’m going to regret later on when I get home, when my back is hurting,” Garcia says. 

Ophthalmology went 335 days without an injury.

But keeping workplace safety in everyone’s awareness was a challenge.  

“The equipment makes a difference, but our behavior also makes a difference. It takes a while for that to happen. It doesn’t happen overnight,” Vickie Lance, assistant department administrator says.

Feedback from people outside the UBT also proved invaluable.

“I’ve been in this department for 15 years and I didn’t know there was a problem. Once we saw it on paper, it made a big impact,” Lance said. “And the visual picture of before and after is wonderful. It makes us feel like we’ve accomplished something.”

Caption information for photo/artwork (reporters)
An example of a San Diego ophthalmology vision lane before the overhaul.
Request Number
pdsa_SD ophthalmology_wps
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Long Teaser

San Diego's ophthalmology team reduced ergonomic workplace injuries while also clearing their vision lanes, which had posed serious safety hazards for medical assistants and patients.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
Vickie Lance, assistant department administrator, management co-lead: 619.516.7172
Please check number of claims (Still no word back from manager --CB 10/8)
pullquote for story:
“I’ve been in this department for 15 years and I didn’t know there was a problem. Once we saw it on paper, it made a big impact." -- Vickie Lance, assistant department administrator of ophthalmology
Needs shaded box. Please insert photo. Paul, Publish when finished.
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Vickie Lance, 619-516-7172

Integrating Workplace Safety Into UBTs

Submitted by Kristi on Sat, 07/10/2010 - 19:11
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Integrating Workplace Safety Into UBTs

This 11-slide presentation includes tools on how to integrate workplace safety into the work of unit-based teams.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PPT

Size:
11 slides

Audience:
UBT co-leads, unit-based teams, Workplace Safety consultants and unit-based team consultants

Best used:
This presentation includes tools on how to integrate workplace safety into the work of unit-based teams. Show the presentation or share the content in meetings and huddles. The following tools and templates are provided:

  • Workplace Safety Checklist
  • UBT/WPS Presentations
  • Path of an Injury
  • WPS Action Plan Template
  • Risk Map
  • Risk Matrix

You also will find guidelines for developing a successful workplace safety plan, plan monitoring and suggestions for ongoing oversight.

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Workplace Safety
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powerpoint presentation
PPT
lmpartnership.org
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Workplace Safety Never Events

Submitted by Kristi on Sat, 07/10/2010 - 19:10
Tool Type
Format
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Workplace Safety Never Events

At the beginning of 2010, Bernard Tyson, executive vice president of Health Plan and Hospital Operations, and the regional presidents came up with a series of actions and effective practices to prevent injuries. One of the actions is to report Workplace Safety Never Events.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Workplace Safety Never Events

Format: 
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience: 
Managers, co-leads and Workplace Safety staff

Best used: 
To inform higher-ups so serious injuries are reported promptly and investigated quickly. 

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Workplace Safety
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lmpartnership.org
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