lmpartnership.org

Asking Good Questions

Submitted by Kristi on Mon, 05/31/2010 - 21:44
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Asking Good Questions

When coaching or problem solving, ask thoughtful questions to engage the other person and help them increase their capacity for solving problems on their own. Thoughtful questions motivate the coachee to think, analyze, speculate and express feelings.

Non-LMP
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When coaching or problem solving, ask thoughtful questions to engage the other person and help them increase their capacity for solving problems on their own. Thoughtful questions motivate the coachee to think, analyze, speculate and express feelings.

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LMP Logo

Submitted by paule on Tue, 05/15/2018 - 15:44
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Topics
Content Section
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LMPSITE-1284

Labor Management Partnership logo, in four file formats (jpg, eps, tif and gif) and two-color and black-and-white versions.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
LMP Logo

Formats: This ZIP file contains two-color and black-and-white versions of the LMP logo in the following five formats:

  • PNG - The most widely used lossless image compression format on the internet; this is typically the format preferred for web projects.
  • TIF – The .tif format does not use compression, so it does not lose image information; this is typically the format preferred for print projects.
  • EPS – The .eps file is the original file format (Adobe Creative Cloud). It ensures the highest possible output quality. If you are working with a professional designer, this is the file format he or she will want to use.
  • JPG – This compressed .jpg file requires less memory than .eps or .tif file types. Use for web and email applications and for multimedia such as PowerPoint presentations.
  • GIF – This small file format uses the minimum amount of information possible. Use it for web and multimedia such as PowerPoint presentations. The .gif format provides the option of saving with transparent background. You can also use it for simple animations on the web.The .tif format does not use compression, so it does not lose image information; this is typically the format preferred for print projects.

Please do not alter the configurations and do not substitute any other font or wording. Refer to the LMP Brand Guidelines for more information.

Links to individual files in the ZIP (use cntrl-click or option-click then "save link as"):

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Co-Lead Action Planning Worksheet

Submitted by Kristi on Mon, 11/07/2016 - 15:12
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
worksheet_co-lead action planning

A worksheet for capturing working agreements between co-leads, and a step-by-step checklist for planning a successful UBT kickoff meeting.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Co-Lead Action Planning Worksheet

Format:
Word DOC

Size:
6 pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Co-leads can learn to work together and successfully kick off their unit-based teams by consulting this checklist.

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Planning a Meeting: Why and Who?

Submitted by Kristi on Wed, 10/26/2016 - 01:59
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Keywords
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
was: table_overview to meeting planning now: Planning a Meeting: Why and Who?

There's nothing worse than a pointless meeting. Before you send out invitations, use this checklist to clarify why you are having this meeting in the first place?. Then figure out who needs to be there and what roles they will play. Your participants will thank you.

Laureen Lazarovici
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Planning a Meeting: Why and Who

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline managers, physicians and employees

Best used:
Before even sending an invitation, use this checklist to clarify the purpose and goal of your meeting and decide who needs to attend. 

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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
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
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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not listing only
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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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Headline (for informational purposes only)
Connecting the dots with popular education
Deck
LMP course brings business, economic issues to life
Story body part 1

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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Where No One Has Gone Before

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 17:00
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Request Number
hank32_nationalagreement_final.docx
Long Teaser

How the new National Agreement was crafted, and how interest-based bargaining led to a result that could not have been achieved otherwise.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Joan Mah of Northern California (above), an optometrist, senior UBT consultant, and ESC-IFPTE Local 20 steward and vice president, was a first-time observer at the 2012 bargaining sessions.
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Tips and Tools

Get the highlights of the National Agreement in this overview, and check out these six tips on using the interest-based process.

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How interest-based bargaining and our new National Agreement set us apart from the crowd
Story body part 1

Many of the several hundred health care workers who gathered at the Manhattan Beach Marriott on May 10 are used to working through the night—it goes with their jobs. But they aren’t used to waiting. By midnight, some were napping on the couches in the lobby. Others milled about in small groups, talking quietly. And some retired to their rooms and asked friends to call them if and when anything happened.

Finally, around 2 a.m., the news came: A subgroup had ironed out the final details. By 3 a.m., the hotel’s central ballroom was filled with cheering, hugging workers—and supervisors, middle managers and senior vice presidents. The 140 management and union negotiators who formed the Common Issues Committee (CIC) gave their unanimous thumbs-up to a new National Agreement that will guide the work of some 130,000 workers, managers and physicians in the nation’s largest private health system.

“It was like we had just won the World Series,” says Alan Kroll, director of the Clinical Contact Center in Colorado and a first-time member of the CIC. “We’d had our ups and downs as a team, but in the end, we all came through as a team. The energy and camaraderie was tremendous.”

R-E-S-P-E-C-T

“The energy of the room was not because we liked each other. It was because of the respect that partnership had brought,” says Ashwin Deo, an orthopedic technician in Sacramento and SEIU UHW member who served on the CIC.

The agreement, reached in the course of five three-day sessions from March to May, is the largest private-sector labor agreement negotiated in the United States this year. Like previous National Agreements, it covers not only wages and benefits but also goals related to service, quality, affordability, workforce and community health, and more. 

Yet how the CIC reached the agreement is even more remarkable than the agreement itself. Rather than engage in a power struggle, the negotiators used interest-based bargaining to solve problems. That process allowed it to focus on solutions to the biggest issue facing health care today—that it costs too much, and too few Americans can afford it—while maintaining Kaiser Permanente’s industry-leading wages and benefits.

Rather than chopping care or benefits to control costs, says John August, executive director of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, the agreement “provides union members with the tools to tackle cost by improving care and efficiency. Improved care and efficiency, delivered by workers at the front line, are the key to extending quality care to every person in our country.”

“Our national bargaining is unique,” says Dennis Dabney, the senior vice president of National Labor Relations and the lead management negotiator. “There is not only a group of labor negotiators at the table, but a broad cross-section of our employees providing recommendations on how to better deliver high-quality, affordable care and ensure Kaiser Permanente is a great place to work well into the future.”

Moreover, the outcome is a testament to the interest-based approach to partnership, not just interest-based bargaining.

“As our facilitators told us, economic issues are tough to resolve in interest-based bargaining,” says Adam Nemer, care delivery finance officer in the Northwest and a member of the bargaining subgroup that focused on benefits. “In the end, we met both management and labor's key interests. But I suspect that was not just because of what happened at the benefits table. It was also the result of an open and honest dialogue on benefits between senior labor and management leaders over the past few years. It was about trust and transparency. In my view, we didn’t reach a solution just because of interest-based bargaining—but we couldn’t have gotten there without it.”

Revolutionary healthy workforce plan

As part of the solution to controlling costs, the agreement includes a revolutionary plan to create the healthiest workforce in the health care industry. Beginning in 2013, the agreement will reward the collective workforce achievement of reduced health risk factors, measured by body mass index (BMI), cholesterol levels, blood pressure levels, smoking rates and workplace injury rates.

“Unions and management agreed that health improvement is an essential strategy for reducing chronic conditions—one of the leading drivers of rising, unsustainable cost,” says SEIU UHW President Dave Regan. “This is a high-road, long-term strategy for the common good.”

Those involved in the process say it’s unlikely that the high road would have been taken had these been traditional, adversarial negotiations. As Joan Mah, an optometrist at San Rafael Medical Center in Northern California and a first-time observer representing her ESC-IFPTE Local 20 colleagues, put it: “Traditional bargaining is really about what I want and not about what is right….When you take the time to allow management and labor to surface their interests, it’s really looking for a global solution.”

“At times it was frustrating, but it was also interesting to see how the interest-based process led us to options we could work with,” says Jean Melnikoff, a senior director of human resources for Southern California, one of the management co-chairs of the workforce of the future subgroup.

Opening doors—and minds

Her sentiment was echoed by members of every subgroup. But that is not to say the process is easy.

“When things get difficult, you need to regroup and work your way through it,” says Arlene Peasnall, senior vice president of human resources in Southern California. “But you end up with better results and stronger relationships.”

“The people who’d done it before said, ‘It’s OK, it can be done,’” says orthopedic technician Deo. “Don’t be afraid of the tension in the room. Don’t be afraid of emotions, because that’s what gets creativity out….When labor and management are at the table, talking to each other as equals, and the ideas are valued equally—I think that opened a lot of doors. And minds, too.”

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Tips on Keeping Injury Rates Down, From KP's Leading Region

Submitted by Jennifer Gladwell on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 16:39
Region
Request Number
e_sty_wps nw_jg
Long Teaser

Northwest leads Kaiser Permanente's hospital-based regions in the fewest workplace safety injuries in 2011.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Notes (as needed)
confirming scrubbed stats with clients. jg 3/8
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Deck
Workplace accidents are costly and preventable
Story body part 1

For the second year in a row, the Northwest region experienced the fewest workplace injuries of any hospital-based region in Kaiser Permanente. The Northwest ended the 2011 reporting year with a 15 percent improvement over injury rates in 2010. (The two California regions, Hawaii and the Northwest operate hospitals, while Colorado, Georgia, the Mid-Atlantic States and Ohio do not.)

Workplace Safety Committee co-leads Marilyn Terhaar and Susan McGovern Kinard attribute the region’s success to several factors:

  • Real-time information. Terhaar sends safety alert emails to managers, stewards, UBT co-leads and safety champions. The alerts list the injuries for the prior week and offer safety tips and resources.
  • Goals at the frontline. Keeping injury rates low is a regional goal and a PSP goal. Unit-based teams are encouraged to work on these workplace safety issues prior to tackling other goals.
  • Culture change. Safety conversations have become part of the workplace culture. If an employee sees someone not working safely or a hazard in the work area, she or he speaks up, knowing the problem will be addressed.
  • Investigation. The approach to safety is proactive. The Employee Health and Safety department investigates the root cause of an accident and tries to make sure the accident does not happen again.

High cost to both employees and KP

Employee injuries are significant in several ways. An injured employee may lose pay and time at work, and a department may have to work short, which may impact patient care. And there’s a financial impact on the organization—which eventually could affect member premiums.

 “The cost to open a workers’ compensation claim is about $1,200 on average,” says Terhaar. “Once you start adding in medical and surgical costs, the expenses can soar.”

Indemnity claims—those claims that cover employees with more serious injuries that require a longer time off—average $21,000.

 “That’s one of the reasons we have such a laser focus on safe patient handling. The risk to the employee for injury is so great,” explains McGovern Kinard.

Prevention

The Northwest region employs a well-constructed safe patient handling program. New employees are trained on safe patient handling, and more than 1,000 employees were retrained in 2011. Hospital and clinic policies require staff to move patients using safe handling techniques and equipment.

 “We have mobile lifts and overhead lifts at Kaiser Sunnyside Medical Center and will have the same equipment at our new hospital opening next year,” says Paulette Hawkins, RN, a workplace safety consultant. “In addition, all medical and dental clinics have mobile lifts and receive annual hands-on refresher training on request.”

Members of the workplace safety committee aren’t resting on their laurels. This year, they plan to bring the focus of safety to the UBT level.

“Most teams can solve their own issues,” say McGovern Kinard. “There’s been an increase in awareness that’s been growing steadily over the last five years. Our numbers say it all.”

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Fontana NICU Opens the Door to Service, 24-7

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 16:20
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Request Number
sty_Fontana_NICU_24hourvisit_am1
Long Teaser

Fontana's Neonatal Intensive Care unit improved service by moving to around-the-clock visiting hours.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Management co-lead Annette Adams
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Collaborate
Service
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It Takes a Village

The team believes access is one of the reasons why the facility has above average scores on patient satisfaction surveys.

In June 2011, of the Fontana patients who were asked:

  • 88.89 percent said they were “kept well-informed” of their infant's condition.
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Letting new families be together any time of day
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For nearly a year now, the Neonatal Intensive Care unit at the Fontana Medical Center has welcomed parents 24 hours a day, thanks to a unit-based team that put the patients’ needs first.

Since April 5, 2011, parents have been able to stay on the unit with the newest member of the family regardless of the hour and even during shift changes and rounding.

“The belief in family-centered care is put into action here,” says management co-lead Annette Adams, RN. “Nothing should come between parents and babies.”

Team members put themselves in the shoes of the parents whose children are treated on the unit: The distress of having a newborn baby staying anywhere other than right by your side, of having to leave your baby in the hands of strangers, and being told when you could come and see your own child.

Making it better for parents

Keeping the service point on the Value Compass in mind, the team looked inward to tackle the problem of concerned parents lacking 24-hour access to the unit.

The UBT began by researching what it takes to have successful open visitation in the NICU and what the benefits are for members and patients. The team found that many NICUs were not truly open to parents 24 hours a day, as parents were asked to leave during change-of-shift reports and physician rounds.

The UBT concentrated on how to make sure parents could remain, despite the concerns.

Shift reports are done at the bedside. But the NICU is one big room where anyone can hear anything. Team members researched how to solve this problem by asking how other Los Angeles-area NICUs, such as Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, handle shift reports without compromising privacy.

Involved in shift hand-offs

Not only do parents now get to see their babies whenever they desire, they are also asked to participate when the physicians round and during the change of shift hand-off, which gives them the opportunity to meet the nurse assuming care of their baby.

“The belief that family-centered care is an essential part of each family’s experience was the driving philosophy behind the progressive move in visiting policy,” says Sheila Casteel, RN, the NICU team’s labor co-lead and UNAC/UHCP member.  

The representative team members enlisted help from the rest of the unit by introducing the concept through the monthly staff newsletter and giving presentations at staff meetings.

Unit staff members were asked for their ideas about how to overcome barriers—real and perceived. Some of the practices adopted included:

  • moving the staff hand-off huddle outside the unit to the conference room
  • making the relief and admitting nurse available to answer parent questions during hand-offs

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UBT Chief's Role

Submitted by Kristi on Wed, 08/10/2016 - 16:04
Tool Type
Format
Taxonomy upgrade extras
UBT Chief's Role

A leaflet that describes the Chief's responsibilities in implementing UBTs.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format: Printed flyer or PDF
Size: 8.5” x 11”
Intended audience: Physicians in Chief and physician team leads
Best used: In meetings and trainings. Can be posted on bulletin boards or in offices

Description: Why should physician leaders support unit-based teams? Simply because the teams remain our best hope for a workplace that supports better delivery of care and service. Find out more in this short letter-size piece that features frequently-asked questions about UBTs.

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Making It Safe to Speak Up

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Mon, 05/09/2016 - 12:02
Tool Type
Format
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
tips_free_speak_tips_managers

Five tips for managers on creating a work environment where workers feel free to share ideas and concerns.

Non-LMP
Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Making It Safe To Speak Up

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline managers and other team leaders

Best used:
Five tips to help frontline managers create an environment where workers feel safe sharing ideas and concerns. Post in your work space and share with other managers.

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Quality
Workplace Safety
Frontline Leadership
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