Frontline Workers

Adapt, Adopt, Abandon

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 17:02
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sty_mistakes_hank26.doc
Long Teaser

How do teams learn from small tests of change that don't turn out as expected? And why is it necessary to take risks when the goal is to improve performance?

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
as noted in "highlighted stories and tools" section, needs a highlights box that links to:
http://www.lmpartnership.org/stories-videos/what-can-leaders-do-be-good-model

additional captions:
Hank26_coverstory_2.jpg:
Like other teams, San Diego Medical Center’s Nuclear Medicine team has sometimes learned the most from tests of change that didn’t pan out. Above, technologist Ken Lukaszewski, an OPEIU Local 30 member.

Hank26_coverstory_6.jpg:
Assistant technologist Jessica Larson is labor co-lead of San Diego Medical Center’s Nuclear Medicine unit-based team.

Photos & Artwork (reporters)
The San Diego Nuclear Medicine team discovered that the premise of their first performance improvement project—high repeats of heart scans—was not the problem they initially suspected. Above, assistant technologist and labor co-lead Jessica Larson (left) and technologist Christine Cook (right) assist patient Robert Evans. Larson and Cook are members of OPEIU Local 30.
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Adapt, adopt, abandon
Deck
Why teams that try and fail are better than teams that always succeed
Story body part 1

"Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new."

—Albert Einstein

This is the story of a team that never failed a test of change. No matter what the team members did, rapid improvement cycle after rapid improvement cycle, every small test tried was a better jewel than the one before. They received an A for their PDSAs.

They were fearless—in their imaginations. The only problem with the team’s brilliant tests of change was that they never got tested, never got to the stage where stumbling or failed ideas might have real consequences. There was no learning, no innovation, no growth—just intriguing ideas that remained bottled.

In health care, it’s still frowned upon to talk about failures or things that don’t work out perfectly for fear the information will be used against the people involved. But even in a high-stakes industry where the consequence of some decisions means life or death, there is plenty of room for improving performance by learning from small failures.

Using small failures as learning opportunities is the cornerstone of creating a learning organization. Small failures are at the heart of the Rapid Improvement Model and its plan, do, study, act cycles.

“Despite the increased rate of failure that accompanies deliberate experimentation, organizations that experiment effectively…are likely to be more innovative, productive and successful,” writes Amy Edmondson, a professor at Harvard Business School, in a December 2004 article in the Quality and Safety in Healthcare Journal.

This in fact is a story of false starts: the story of unit-based teams and employees throughout Kaiser Permanente who already are learning, developing and innovating from missteps or downright unsuccessful small tests of change.

From projects that changed direction after data contradicted the original premise, to tests of change that were tweaked or abandoned all together, workers describe how they tried a small improvement that didn't turn out as expected and still gained from the experience. And even, eventually, found success.

Learning to fail

At San Diego Medical Center’s Nuclear Medicine department, the unit-based team decided its first test of change project would look at reducing the number of redundant heart scans, which technologists were certain were wasting time and resources.

In November 2009, team members began to track the number of repeat scans to establish a baseline. They figured repeats would be at least 25 percent of the heart scans. After a month of logging the scans, however, they discovered something quite different.

“The number of repeat heart scans was actually between 7 to 10 percent,” says the UBT’s labor co-lead, Jessica Larson, a tech assistant and OPEIU Local 30 member.

The team’s hypothesis was amiss. It switched gears.

Since several of the staff recommendations for test of change projects related to heart scans, the team focused next on the variation in the instructions patients were given. If team members gave identical instructions, they might be able to all but eliminate repeat heart scans.

“The test of change at that point was to make sure everyone was following the protocol,” says Randy Andres, a nuclear medicine technologist and OPEIU Local 30 member.

HIGHLIGHTED STORIES OR TOOLS

What can leaders do? Be a good model. [story]
 

The team created laminated handouts with one set of clear instructions that technologists and receptionists were to hand out to every patient before a scan.

“We did that for a few weeks, and found it was a lot more complicated than we anticipated,” Larson says. “You had inpatients, outpatients, observation-unit patients….Forms were getting misplaced because patients would leave them in the waiting rooms or in their purse. Or people weren’t even giving them out.”

During the same time, a supply shortage meant the department had to switch the type of injectable radioactive isotope it was using. The change meant a whole new set of protocols. Compounding it all, the department’s longtime manager retired.

It was time to shelve the test of change.

But was it a waste of time? Not at all, say Larson and Andres. Both say it provided valuable information about the department’s work flow—as well as practical knowledge of how to conduct tests of change.

“This was a very good teaching experience for us,” Andres says. “We didn’t even know about tests of change before this. It’s not simply a matter of just changing something. You have to go through this process.”

Too much of a good thing

Further north at Redwood City Medical Center, the Gastroenterology department discovered you can have too much of a good thing.

Contracting with an Oregon company that specializes in mass outreach calls, the department began using automatic robocalls to reach patients ages 50 to 75 who were due or overdue for colorectal screenings.

“We had to think outside the box,” says Julie Dalcin, director of medicine. “This was a way to reach a lot of people.”

The first round of robocalls went out in November 2009, with some 10,000 calls made. They reached 97 percent of the members who were due for the tests—but there was a problem. The calls were made within a span of three hours, and the response overwhelmed the department and the facility. The voicemail box the team had set up in advance barely helped; it could take only 50 messages.

“We got bombarded by calls from patients calling back with questions or requests. Our operator was inundated,” says manager Isabel Uibel. “Physicians in other departments were also bombarded with calls. People…were like, ‘What’s going on?’”

Michele Coons, a medical assistant and SEIU UHW member, was devoted to returning the calls and to mailing “FIT kits,” the at-home stool tests that help detect early signs of colorectal cancer, to those who had requested them.

“Many people had a lot of questions,” Coons says. “‘Why did I get this call?’ ‘What does a FIT kit test mean?’”

It took a week to figure out a system for getting back to all the patients, she says.

“I think at the end of day you have to be willing to try,” Uibel says. “And forgive yourself for the time you put into something that didn’t work. And don’t lose motivation. But also know when…you’ve got to say, ‘We’re not going down the right path at all.’”

In some workplaces, what had happened would be labeled a disaster. But not in Redwood City. The essential idea was sound. For the second round of calls, the team addressed the overwhelming response by having the calls made over a two-week period.

“We didn’t think we needed to throw the baby out with the bathwater,” Uibel says. “We just had to keep tweaking to make the system work for us.”

Too good to be true

When it came to how quickly patient messages are responded to, the Internal Medicine at the East Denver Medical Office in Colorado was pretty close to bottom—only 8 percent of patient advice calls were answered within an hour. The team members were open to trying anything, and after several small tests of change, they hit on something so ridiculously simple that some people resisted it.

Nurses tape neon orange cards with the patient message to the door of the exam room where the doctor is working. The doctor sees the message on the way out of the room and goes back to his or her office to respond.

Within the first three months of the test, the department saw message turnaround times soar to 30 percent answered within the hour.

“You had some tangible symbol that you were trying to make these numbers move. It was a great motivator,” says Christopher Hicks, MD, the team’s physician co-lead. “It was different. It wasn’t something that was happening electronically.”

Then they hit a wall.

“We were sitting around threshold or target and then would drop back down,” explains Olivia Wright, supervisor and management co-lead. “We were just hovering around 20 to 30 percent.”

The team brainstormed about why it couldn’t move the number above 30 percent.

Someone suggested one reason could be that the call center opened at 7 a.m. and most of the staff didn’t start until 8 a.m. They were starting the day already behind the curve with waiting messages. Two nurses changed their schedule and started coming in at 7:30 a.m. That seemed to help: 52 percent of patient messages got a reply within an hour.

“You’ve got to give something a shot,” Wright says. “The first thing you come out of the gate with isn’t necessarily going to be the end-all be-all, but you’ve got to start somewhere.”

One of the most surprising lessons for the entire department was the fact that small changes could have such a large impact.

“There was a sense of disbelief,” Wright recalls. “We had to reassure the team that the volume of work hadn’t gone down or that it wasn’t because of the time of year. We’ve sustained these results since May, and it finally started to sink in that small, subtle changes really are the reason for these results.”

Failure is part of experimentation

Experts who study organizations like health care and the airline industry corroborate the importance the process of experimentation plays in organizational learning.

“Under conditions where there’s a lot of uncertainty and constantly moving parts and work is customized or unique, the only way to make it work is to allow the right level of leeway for teams…to experiment thoughtfully,” Edmondson says. In the long run, lasting success comes from a willingness to try new things; but, if you try new things, you're going to fail sometimes.

This isn’t license for projects based on haphazard hypotheses, but it underscores the fact that performance improvement methods such as the Rapid Improvement Model are made for small failures. Because the process allows for quick experimentation, with results evaluated within 30 to 60 days, there is little to lose.

Barbara Grimm, senior vice president of the Labor Management Partnership, would have people ask themselves a few questions that can help them weigh the possibility of failure.

“Have you reasoned through the consequences? That is key,” Grimm says. “Do you have the patient’s interest absolutely there? Do you have a plan if it doesn’t go well?”

Edmondson argues there are two key reasons health care organizations still resist learning from small failures: The culture often discourages questions, challenges, or admissions of error, and a demanding workload and pace force staff to rely on quick fixes when something doesn’t work, instead of systematic problem solving.

That is changing at Kaiser Permanente with the commitment to providing frontline staff with training and support to conduct root cause analysis and problem solving with RIM, RIM+ and other performance improvement tools. And unit-based teams give staff members the place and time to do this work.

John August, executive director of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, believes the

true purpose of the Labor Management Partnership is to recognize the mission of KP and the mission of the unions are at profound risk due to the economic, competitive and public policy environment in which we operate.

“We must continually remind everyone in the organization that the why of what we do in partnership is driven by this fundamental recognition and agreement,” August says. “If we don’t make the effort to discuss the reasons why we’re doing this, people will get the impression that people are just being asked to do something. And being asked to do something doesn’t create an atmosphere of safety.”

Edmondson says the sense of safety will further develop when we learn to accept and work with our limitations.

“People need a sense of psychological safety, and frankly a sense of humor about our humanness,” Edmondson says. “Somewhere along the line we get socialized and begin to buy into the absurd notion that we should be perfect.”

Back at the lab

In San Diego, Larson thinks even if the tests of change didn’t work exactly as planned, it gave the team something even more important—the beginning of a different work culture.

“Being able to work on small tests of change enabled us to get past what’s always been,” Larson says. “There are people who have been here longer than I’ve been alive and so are accustomed to the way it was always done. But trying something new can save us time, and save the company money, and can be better for the patient. So I found it nice to look at it like, ‘Let’s try just this little thing and it might just make it better.’”

Larson is certain the eventual reward will outweigh any frustrations in wrong hypotheses or failed tests.

“Either you find you can fix something or you can’t, and you just move on,” Larson says. “Just keep trying. Because ultimately, it’s going to be a success in the end.”

 

 

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How to Be an Effective Union Co-Lead

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 15:45
Topics
Request Number
peeradvice_Carol_Hammill_labor_cochair
Long Teaser

Longtime union leader Carol Hammill reveals what it takes to build an effective partnership at the facility level.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
12/20: Hi Julie, I put in Carol's contact info.
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Caroll Hammill (left) pictured with management chair Ursula Doidic
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How to be an effective facility-level labor co-chair
Deck
Commit to the time it takes and to collaboration and planning
Story body part 1

I am one of the chairs the LMP leadership team, along with a union colleague from UFCW and two management leaders. I’m also the co-lead of the Woodland Hills’ union coalition. In addition, I’m a full-time certified registered nurse anesthetist in the operating room. To be an effective labor co-lead takes three things: time, collaboration and planning.

Time

I have been doing partnership work at Woodland Hills for 10 years. People respect the time I’ve invested. You have to be on fire for this because it’s an enormous responsibility. It’s going to cost you time, angst and effort. And you can’t build relationships passing in the hall. You have to make the investment of face time. That means showing up at the LMP council meetings, monthly, from 8:00 a.m. to noon.

Planning Ahead

It is important to bring in and plan for new blood. At Woodland Hills, we rotate the labor co-chair in our leadership team every two years. I believe this allows everyone to have a say. It builds trust and experience. And it ensures buy-in from each union—and each segment of each union. We build-in mentorship. For three months, the new person sits in and the current co-lead shows that person the ropes.

We also did this in the Kaiser Permanente Nurse Anesthetist Association when I was president in 2006. I would go with new facility reps to meetings. 

Collaboration

We really foster union efforts at the medical center level. We’ve got a group of long-term union coalition people and our unions speak with a single, powerful voice. There have been issues between unions, and we had to work things out until cooler heads prevailed. People say ‘I’m sorry’ and move on.

Working with management is both easy and difficult. It’s easy because they are so partnership oriented and respectful of the unions, and they welcome input. They lead by influence—not by authority by virtue of where they are on the food chain—just like we do. It is difficult sometimes because it requires us to work hard as partners. Sometimes it would be easier to just go along with their recommendations, but then we wouldn’t really be doing our jobs as union leaders. At certain points, you have to say, ‘Well, let me think about that,’ and ask your constituents what they think.

Hospitals are traditionally very hierarchical. The partnership is such an opportunity to have a voice.

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Southern California
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lmpartnership.org
facility newsletter (print)
union website
union newsletter
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Poster: Check-in Made Easy

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Tue, 11/02/2010 - 11:26
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bb_northwest_checkin

This poster highlights a team of receptionists in the Northwest that found a way to improve customer service.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Check-in Made Easy

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience: 
Union-represented employees

Best used:
Share these efficiency tips with staff and receptionists to improve customer service and streamline the check-in process.

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Poster: Going Green With Blue Wrap Recycling Kellie Applen Tue, 11/02/2010 - 11:21
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PDF
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Content Section

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline workers and managers

Best used:
Use this to encourage your surgery team colleagues to help make Kaiser Permanente more affordable and at the same time, preserve the environment. Post it on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas. 

 

bb_irvine_goingreen

This poster features a surgery team that is helping to make KP more affordable and at the same time, preserving the environment.

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Game Changer: Putting the Patient First

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Mon, 10/18/2010 - 16:21
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Request Number
sty_gamechanger_hankcoverstory_fall2010
Long Teaser

A team in South San Francisco that improved the surgery-scheduling process for patients and teams in San Diego that took a hard look at their service scores demonstrate what things look like when teams truly consider what's best for the patient as they make decisions.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
note: there are links in "highlighted stories and tools" section.

caption for second photo (hank25_coverstory3):
Streamlining the process: The new pre-surgery checklist developed by a South San Francisco UBT has helped patients and improved communication for everyone involved. Dr. Brian Tzeng (center) helped lead the work.

caption for third photo (hank25_coverstory6):
Improving service: Terry Caballero, a surgery scheduler and SEIU UHW member, helped spark the work that led to a streamlined surgery-scheduling process.
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Making things easier: Members of a San Diego Medical Center turn team help KP patient Deborah Allen shift in her bed.
Only use image in listings (editors)
not listing only
Highlighted stories and tools (reporters)
Benefits to teamwork

In South San Francisco, Dr. Brian Tzeng, who’s an anesthesiologist, and others on the team say that working on the project through the unit-based team allowed them to understand each others’ roles and responsibilities better—and also gave them an opportunity to hear and contribute an opinion from that perspective.

“One of the great benefits of this group was it was an outlet for multiple providers at different levels to voice their concerns and actually be heard,” Dr. Tzeng explains. “The greatest frustration for many individuals is we all had great ideas but didn’t know how to make that happen. We realized through this group we had a means to make those changes.”

Dr. Tzeng is certain the team’s accomplishments are the result of every team member’s commitment to working out the best solution in the patient’s best interest. There were no politics, just concern for the member.

“To us, this is not a job,” says Debbie Taylor. “We come here to serve a patient.”

And what about Caballero’s initial concern, that patients weren’t getting enough advance notice about when they have to be at the hospital? The team has been slowly chipping away on that as well. In October, they expect to start giving patients two days’ advance notice of their arrival time at the hospital.

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Game changer: Putting the patient first
Deck
Teams in South San Francisco and San Diego work to keep patients front and center
Story body part 1

What happens when teams truly walk a mile in their patients’ shoes? They often discover their own actions are making that mile a rocky one for patients—and as a result make huge breakthroughs in the way they deliver care.

In the case of South San Francisco’s multidepartmental pre-admission team, observing their processes from the other side of the gurney spurred them to dramatically streamline the pre-surgery and admitting process for patients. With the member at the forefront of their thinking, the team members turned a two-inch-thick packet of confusing, redundant information into a streamlined, one-page checklist. And a funny thing happened—while redesigning the process to help patients, the team improved the way it works.

“Patients would often get confused and weren’t sure what the next step in the process was,” says Brian Tzeng, MD, the Peri-operative Medicine director. “We realized we didn’t have a clear path for the patient to follow.”

Other teams throughout Kaiser Permanente are making similar realizations, framing their performance improvement work by asking the question, “What’s best for the patient?” If a possible solution doesn’t work well for the member and patient, then there’s more brainstorming to be done. These teams are taking the Value Compass to heart—organizing their work not just around the four points but examining what they’re doing from the patient’s perspective.

What does that mean for frontline teams? At the San Diego Medical Center, the Emergency Department sees up to 300 patients every 24 hours. Physicians and staff members are always on the go, delivering on the ultimate bottom line—saved lives. What could be more important? Clinical quality is high; patients are seen in a timely manner and the rate of unscheduled return visits is good.

Yet the results of a recent patient satisfaction survey bothered the team. The department scored well overall, but their patients gave it only 63 percent approval on one question: While you were in the Emergency Department, were you kept informed about how long the treatment would take?

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Preparing You for Surgery

Submitted by cassandra.braun on Wed, 09/22/2010 - 18:16
Tool Type
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Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
tips_presurgerychecklist

A South San Francisco pre-admissions team developed this one-page, easy-to-use checklist to help prepare their patients for surgery.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Team develops surgery prep checklist.

Format:
PDF and Word DOC

Size:
1 page, 8½” x 11”

Intended Audience:
Teams working on improving the pre-surgery process for patients.

Best used:
Use this document as a model to consider how your facility might revamp the presurgery process and create your own one-page checklist for patients. 
This checklist was developed by a multidepartmental team in South San Francisco that wanted to streamline the presurgery process for patients. As a result of using it, 80 percent of patients are now being confirmed as pre-admitted 24 hours before surgery and the completeness and accuracy of admissions rate has hit 99.4 percent.

Read more about the process in the Fall 2010 Hank.

 

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UBT Sends Message on Colon Cancer Screening Shawn Masten Mon, 09/20/2010 - 14:13
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lmpartnership.org
Headline (for informational purposes only)
UBT Sends Message on Colon Cancer Screening
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Union City team effort helps save lives
Taxonomy upgrade extras

Various interventions have been implemented to increase the rate of colon cancer screenings, including at-home Fecal-Immunochemical Tests or FIT kits. These kits are mailed or handed to patients identified as age- or risk-appropriate and can be completed in the privacy of the member’s own home.

The FIT kit doesn’t require a doctor’s appointment and is returned directly to the lab in a prepaid envelope. Patients who have positive FIT kit results for occult blood are referred for further testing.

“A long time ago, there was no way to track these people,” Kari Russitano, medical assistant, SEIU UHW, says. “Kaiser has done a lot to improve cancer screenings.”

But getting members to take and return the test remains a problem.

In 2009, the Union City Medical Center fell short of its 71 percent return rate goal for colorectal screenings. Kaiser Permanente routinely mass mails the kits to members identified through the electronic medical records database. But many members either don’t return the tests or the ones they return aren’t legible.

“Thirty percent were thrown away because we couldn’t read their name or the medical record number,” Deborah Hennings-Cook, RN, manager, Internal Medicine, says.

Clinical coordinator, Vimi Chand, Department of Internal Medicine, adds, “Obviously mailing alone wasn’t working, so we decided to contact members by phone or secure email. And it worked.”

Of the 1,754 members contacted, more than 63 were referred for further screening. 

Having the medical assistants and receptionists make the calls was a hard sell at first, but their peers in the unit-based team stressed the preventive nature of the test.

“It didn’t seem like extra work, because we collaborated together and educated each other to think of it as if ‘this could be your family member,’” Sophia Opfermann, receptionist, OPEIU Local 29, says. “A lot of staff didn’t know what the FIT kits were for, so we educated them about that, too.” 

Then frontline staff came up with the idea for the note cards—bright fluorescent notes that read: “This test detects early signs of COLON CANCER.”

“Knowing that many people don’t understand the importance of the test, they made the verbiage strong about ‘saving lives’ and ‘help us help you,’" Hennings-Cook says. "It was something they wanted to do, and it worked.”

One challenge was adding the phone calls and emails to the medical assistants’ existing workload. Lists of patients who hadn’t responded were provided to medical assistants but some had more than others.

“We heard a little bit of flak when the lists first came out and some MAs had huge lists, but they helped each other and just did it,” Chand says. 

In the end, the bottom line was helping patients.

“By collaborating together and educating each other, we are helping to saving lives,” Opfermann says.

Caption information for photo/artwork (reporters)
This flourescent green card now appears in every FIT Kit mailed to members.
Request Number
pdsa_union city medicine_crc screenings
Only use image in listings
not listing only
Long Teaser

Internal Medicine team in Northern California increases cancer screenings with the personal touch.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Notes (as needed)
add this to end of story in itals (tlf):
For more information about this team's work, contact Debbie.Hennings-Cooks@kp.org or Vimi.Chand@kp.org. Paul please insert photo. Shawn: Is it Internal Medicine or Medicine dept.

note links in highlighted tools section
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Date of publication

Poster: Put Patients First, Help KP Grow

Submitted by Kellie Applen on Wed, 09/15/2010 - 15:12
Region
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Format
Content Section
Taxonomy upgrade extras
bb_help_kp_grow

Medical Assistant Kris Gardner shares a patient interaction tip.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Put Patients First, Help KP Grow

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Union coalition-represented employees and frontline managers

Best used:
Use this poster, featuring medical assistant Kris Gardner sharing some patient interaction tips, on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

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Patient Care Cards

Submitted by anjetta.thackeray on Sun, 08/29/2010 - 21:21
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pdsa_ocirvine_medsurg_care card_pdf

These care cards allow patients to ask questions of their doctors and nurses. Team members can collect completed cards from the patients to address issues and concerns before the patients leave the hospital.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Patient Care Cards

Format:
Zipped PDF

Size:
Printout, 2-sided, 4" x 6" index card

Intended Audience:
Unit-based teams

Best used:
Download and print these two care cards to give to patients for their comments, allowing teams to address in-patient concerns. One care card is for patients to ask questions of their nurses and make comments on their nursing care. The other card is for patients to ask questions of their doctors and make comments on care from their doctors. This tool is inspired by a card developed by the Medical-Surgical 4B unit-based team at Irvine Medical Center.

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UBT Tracker

UBT Tracker is a web-based tool to collect and report data about unit-based teams.

Each UBT creates a record to track its membership, assign key team roles and describe its projects and tests of change.

Unit-based team members can search the database to find out what other teams in similar departments are doing and learn about projects that address a particular performance measure.

Sponsors and leaders use the information from UBT Tracker to understand what teams are working on and how UBTs contribute to the organization’s goals.

Use of UBT Tracker is required. Teams are rated on their progress on the Path to Performance in part by the data they enter in Tracker. 

 

Communicator
Non-LMP
Editor
Tyra Ferlatte
Classification
Long Teaser

The UBT Tracker is a web-based tool that helps teams and the people who support teams collect and report data related to performance improvement.

Highlighted Stories and Tools
Sidebar box title
Finding Your Way With UBT Tracker
Sidebar text

Log on to UBT Tracker: Go to HRconnect and sign on. After you have entered your NUID and password, navigate to Performance > Optimize Team Performance > UBT Tracker.

Alternatively, navigate to Work @ KP > Labor & LMP > UBT Tracker. 

These tools will help you find and enter information in UBT Tracker: