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Tips for Reducing Wait Times

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 04/17/2018 - 16:10
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Show our members you know their time is valuable. Try out these tips for reducing wait time and improving efficiency. 

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Laureen Lazarovici
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Download the Tip Sheet

Want a colorful tip sheet with these ideas to hand out and post on bulletin boards? Download one here!

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Tips for Reducing Wait Times
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Show our members you value their time
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Who hasn’t experienced the frustration of a long wait to get a prescription filled or a lab test done, or to see a physician who’s running behind schedule? To help keep Kaiser Permanente patients and members happy, many unit-based teams are tackling this issue and finding ways to reduce wait times.

  1. Raise awareness of the problem by sharing data about the department’s wait times and patient satisfaction scores with unit-based team members.
  2. Help your co-workers understand it is everyone’s responsibility to be attentive to members who have been waiting for long periods of time — and recognize co-workers who do this well.
  3. Inform patients of delays by having the receptionist let them know if a physician is running late.
  4. Provide members and patients who have been waiting for extended periods of time with individual attention and updated information by “rounding” in the waiting area.
  5. Put a focus on wait times by posting patient arrival times on exam room doors or having pharmacists call out the wait time in the pharmacy.
  6. Utilize an “all hands on deck” approach, so when wait times hit a certain threshold, all available staff members drop what they’re doing and help reduce long lines.
  7. Consider shifting employees’ schedules to ensure adequate staffing during peak hours and at the start of the day, so you don't fall behind from the beginning.*
  8. Promote alternatives to in-person visits such as prescription refills by mail or email, phone or video consultations with doctors.
  9. Rethink who does what if part of the reason for long wait times is that only employees in particular job category are allowed to do a certain task.*
  10. Create a quiet zone in pharmacies to reduce distractions for the primary filling technician.

*  Consult with local unions to ensure proposed changes are in line with the contracts.

 

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Putting Emergency Room Patients on the Fast Track

  • Setting up a fast track area with four patient rooms at the front of the department
  • Agreeing to use standardized criteria for triage
  • Keeping patients in treatment rooms only while being treated; waiting occurs in the fast track waiting area

What can your team do to identify areas that need improvement? What else could your team do to shorten the time patients have to wait for service?

 

 

Questionnaire Shaves Wait Times for Gastrointestinal Patients

  • Creating a questionnaire and training staff on the new process
  • Partnering with the business office supervisor and asking the receptionists to hand the form to all GI procedure patients at check-in
  • Decreasing/minimizing the RN time to review the entire document in detail and focus on patients' specific questions
  • Giving patients a choice between RN discharge or MD discharge

What can your team do to improve efficiencies in your department? What else could your team do to help shorten patients' wait times?

 

 

From Tears to Cheers Laureen Lazarovici Fri, 05/13/2016 - 00:08
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From tears to cheers
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Pharmacy UBT pulls through with good communication and widespread involvement
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sty_Hank47_tears to cheers
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How a pharmacy unit-based team turned itself around and reduced stress by improving communication, increasing involvement and building camaraderie.

Story body part 1

Fairy Mills, a pharmacy technician and member of UFCW Local 555, has worked for Kaiser Permanente for 29 years. Not long ago, however, there were days she left the Mt. Scott Pharmacy ready to cry, exhausted. Wait times were up and service scores had plummeted. She thought about retiring but decided to tough it out—and was voted in as the union co-lead for the department’s unit-based team.

About the same time, Linh Chau arrived as the new supervisor. He wasn’t sure what he’d stepped into. “It was the perfect storm,” he says. “The team was stressed out, members were unhappy, membership was up, and in the midst of it all, we were implementing a new software system.”

Pharmacies in the Northwest region were in a tough spot a year or so ago—and that was especially true for the Mt. Scott Pharmacy. Part of the Sunnyside campus, it’s the second busiest pharmacy in the region, seeing an average of 500 patients a day and filling nearly 1,000 prescriptions.

Although other regions had already made the transition to ePIMS, a software system that syncs up with KP HealthConnect®, the migration process hadn’t been easy.

“We had to reenergize the team,” Chau says.

Chau and Mills’ first strategy was to give staff members confidence that things would improve. The two co-leads began rounding, checking in with UBT members regularly and making sure everyone had a chance to offer suggestions for improvement— giving them the power to shape how things are done, one of the key elements for beating back burnout.

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Jennifer Gladwell
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Tyra Ferlatte
Shannon Cazinha, UBT development consultant, worked with management co-lead Linh Chau and union co-lead Fairy Mills (left to right) to help their Northwest pharmacy team make improvements that gave members more control over their work.
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Get the Tools

Working with outdated processes and procedures is sure to cause stress. Getting team members involved in performance improvement will help turn things around.