Vaccinating in Partnership
Workers, managers and physicians team up and leverage Partnership principles and methods to combat COVID-19.
Workers, managers and physicians team up and leverage Partnership principles and methods to combat COVID-19.
Faced with disappointing vaccination rates among its members, union activists reach out to physicans to combat misinformation.
How to get that feeling of success and fulfillment that comes from doing work that matters.
Using a model perfected by building trades unions, KP and Partnership unions create labor pools to deploy the right workers to the right places in the fight against COVID-19.
COVID-19 is testing partnership as never before.
Management and labor have had to work together quickly to retool the delivery system to support rapidly changing needs. Employees’ and physicians’ skills and talents are needed in new ways and in new places — so leaders from Kaiser Permanente and unions created labor pools to get KP employees to where they were needed.
It’s one of dozens of innovations made to provide top-quality care at a time when every day is bringing new challenges. The swift work was possible in part because of the foundation provided by the relationships and values of the Labor Management Partnership.
In Southern California's Riverside service area, “It’s all-hands on deck,” says Jiji Abraham, area chief financial officer. “Even physicians are in the labor pool.”
Check out these links to help navigate the coronvirus crisis:
Because frontline workers, managers and physicians have years of experience working together in partnership, they are coming together to fight the COVID-19 crisis.
Let's face it: Change is difficult. Use these tips to make it easier for your team.
This training explains why the Labor Management Partnership is important to Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions and how unit-based teams are transforming Kaiser Permanente.
Co-leads administering a dose of fun helps shake up a department that had low morale.
As KP workers focus on their new total health message—internally and externally—UCSF researchers say the FDA should remove sugar from the list of foods 'generally regarded as safe.'
Henrietta, the resident columnist for the LMP's quarterly magazine Hank, compares the new Total Health Incentive cloverleaf to the Value Compass.